Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 59, Decatur, Adams County, 11 March 1963 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Bidault Asks For Asylum In Germany STEINEBACH, Germany (UPI) —Fugitive former French Premier Georges Bidault, who stirred up a political storm in Britain only last week, raised a ticklish question for West Germany today with his plea for political asylum. Bidault, who was discovered in a dawn police raid Sunday in this tiny Bavarian resort village, is wanted by the French government as the leader of the underground National Resistance Council (CNR), which is dedicated to overthrowing the regime of President Charles de Gaulle. His plea for political asylum could be highly embarrassing for West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who recently signed a friendship treaty with De Gaulle. The treaty has not yet been ratified by the German parliament. Under Police Protection Bidault, 63, was placed under police protection in the hilltop villa where he was discovered. He immediately asked Bavarian state authorities for political asylum and said he had mailed a similar request to Adenauer. Federal government authorities in Bonn, however, said no such request had been received, as far as they knew. Bidault was taken from his guarded villa this morning for more questioning about his activities in West Germany. The former premier appeared tired and slightly stooped as he left the house for the drive to police headquarters five miles away. Bidault's appearance in a filmed tele vis ion interview over the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) network last week aggravated the already chilly relations between Britain and France. It resulted in widespread criticism of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan’s government by the British press and opposition politicians. Seek OAS Members It was not immediately clear whether Bavarian police actually were hunting for Bidault when they found him Sunday morning in a three-story stone villa, 20 miles from Munich. Heinz Graf Houhuys, a Dutch journalist who rents the villa, told newsmen 12 police officials entered the house looking for members of the Secret Army Organization (OAS), the anti-Gaullist French terrorist group allied with

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the CNR. "They were greatly surprised when one of the guests of the house produced a diplomat's passport issued for Georges Bidault,” Nouhuys said. Nouhuys claimed federal officials in Bonn had known since last week that Bidault was in Bavaria. Selective Blockade Os Cuba Suggested WASHINGTON (UPI) — Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen has suggested a “selective blockade” to cut off oil shipments to Cuba if it could be imposed without provoking war. Dirksen said Sunday he agreed with President Kennedy that a complete blockade of Cuba would be an act of war and very risky. He said “nobody wants to take the chance of plunging this country into war if he can help it.” But the GOP leader said Cuban Premier Fidel Castro’s regime must be destroyed and one way might be to institute a selective blockade if experts on international law should decide that it would not be an act of war. Other developments on Cuba included : ; —Deputy Defense Secretary Roswell Gilpatric said he did not know how many of the 17,000 Soviet troops in Cuba had been removed. But he said the administration would not be satisfied until they were gone. —Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., Called critics of Kennedy’s Cuban policy “war whoopers.” He pinned the tag on Sens. Kenneth Keating, R-N.Y., and Hugh Scott, R-Pa., and Rep. William E. Miller, R-N.Y., the GOP national chairman. —Rep. George W. Brown, DCalif., said there was a “hysterical clamor” over Cuba stirred up by a “vociferous minority” who seem to think the solution to U.S. problems would be physical destruction of the island. —Rep. William C. Cramer, RFla., said the American people were entitled to know “who gave the orders" in the unsuccessful Bay of Pigs invasion. He referred to the dispute over whether air support was promised for the invaders and then withdrawn. Boiling Eggs Eggs will not burst while boiling if one end of each egg is pricked with a needle before placing in the water. This makes an outlet for air and prevents the shell from cracking.

Former French Army Officer Is Executed PARIS (UPl)—The French government today executed a former army officer convicted of leading an assassination attempt against President Charles de Gaulle. De Gaulle personally spared two other plotters. An army firing squad shot exLt. Col. Jean-Marie Bastien-Tbiry, 35, shortly after dawn in rainswept Fort d'lvry. De Gaulle commuted death sentences to life imprisonment for Alain de Bourgrenet de la Tocnaye, 37, and Jacques Prepost, 31. The three were convicted with 11 other defendants last Monday for the Aug. 22 attempt on De Gaulle’s life in the Paris suburb of Petit Clamart. There was no judicial appeal possible from the special court’s verdict, and only De Gaulle could commute the sentences. Informed observers said the swiftness with which BastienThiry’s execution was carried out appeared designed as a warning to the secret Army Organization (OAS) and Council of National Resistance (CNR) that terrorist acts will be punished severely. The sources said De Gaulle probably would have spared BastienThiry’s life except for growing indications that the OAS and CNR, which is headed by former Premier Georges Bidault, were stepping up plans to try to overthrow and possibly assassinate De Gaulle. Since the Petit Clamart trial ended, Paris banker Henri Lafond has been shot to death in the street and several spectacular bank raids have been carried out, apparently by OAS terrorists. Believed still plotting an attempt on De Gaulle's life is Georges (The Limp) Watin, 40, one of three men condemned to death in absentia at the trial. The other five defendants—two tried in absentia — received prison terms. Execution Delay Refused In a last attempt to save himself, Bastien-Tbiry asked for his execution to be delayed until the Council of State could hear an appeal based on the discovery of CNR leader Bidault Sunday in Steinebach, Germany. BastienThiry claimed throughout the fiveweek trial that the CNR wanted only to kidnap De Gaulle not kill him. He hoped Bidault could confirm his story.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Three Small Town Teams Win Regionals By KURT FREUDENTHAL United Pres* International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Three small-town toughies — Ireland, Royal Center and Berne —today kept the city powers from taking over completely heading into the next-to-last round for the 53rd annual Indiana high school basketball championship. Ireland at Huntingburg and Royal Center at Logansport became first-time regional winners Saturday night, thus joining defending state champion Evansville Bosse and the three top-rated outfits — unbeaten Columbus and Muncie Central and South Bend Central—in next weekend’s four semi-state tourneys. And Berne made it into the “Sweet Sixteen” for the third time, succeeding at Fort Wayne with a 54-52 overtime win over Angola. Ireland, the smallest school left in the four-week show with just 147 students, apparently figured what was good enough to win for Milan in the 1950 s was good enough for its Spuds. They had little trouble with Sullivan in the regional afternoon round, then used their deliberate style of offense to upset Washington for the title, 39-37. on a last-second shot by Pat Schlitter. 4 Power* Left Some of the “big wheels” had to go, of course, but the only ranking powerhouses to get axed were from the far North —Goshen, Michigan City and Gary Roosevelt, ranked fifth through seventh, respectively. But only four members of the UPI coaches’ board “Big Ten” survived the 4«-game session—the three top-rated quintets and ninthranked Bosse. The UPI form chart also took a beating, correctly predicting only 9 of 16 winners. But the results reflected the consensus that this year’s shoot was as wide open as any in recent years—and that it remained. There was nothing unusual about the surrender of Madison and Kokomo, both state tourney finalists, last year. Columbus easily bested Madison, 64-49, to run its perfect string to 25. And Kokomo was edged by Noblesville, 69-68. But among the big surprises were the “arrival” of East Chicago Washington, runnerup to Bosse for the title last year, and Greencastle. , Led by 6-8 Rich Mason, East Chicago’s battlers romped over Valparaiso and Michigan City, the team that licked them twice handily during the season. Mason pumped in 46 points against Michigan City and 28 against Valpo for over-all regional scoring honors. Valley Champs Ousted Greencastle, a 12-game loser during the season, bested Williamsport and Crawfordsville for regional honors at Covington. Rockville, Vincennes and Frankfort were other upset victims. 1 Rockville’s Wabash Valley tourney champs, boasting a 25-1 record, had their 21-game winning streak snapped by Crawfordsville, 64-53. Vincennes couldn’t make it three times in one season over Washington and lost, 55-49, and four-time state champ Frankfort was bumped by little Wells at Lafayette, 67-64. Oddly enough, all three winners stumbled in the regional till* round. . Only seven teams retained regional titles—Connersville, East Chicago, Bosse, Seymour, Lafay* ette, Huntington and Muncie. Huntington needed a rare triple overtime to outlast host Marion, 69-61. And of the 14 ex-state champs that started regional play, only Bosse, East Chicago, Lafayette, Muncie and South Bend Central survived. The emphasis as the surpriseloaded “Sweet Sixteen” field was formed apparently was on defense. Not an 80-point per game shooter is left, Lafayette leading the survivors with a 77.6 point average. The Bronchos led the field at this stage last year with a 91-point pace. Vikings Lead Defense Columbus, which clashes with Muncie in the top game of Saturday’s semi-state afternoon round at Butler Fieldhouse here, has a 76.8 average, Muncie is 75.1, Bosse 74.6. Huntington continued to lead in defense, holding its tourney foes to an average of 32.4 points while licking them by the widest average margin—36.8. Ireland allowed its foes just 44 points a game and Noblesville 46.8. Muncie piled up a 24.6-point winning margin, Bosse 22.6. Greencastle’s 6.8 winning margin was the smallest in the “Sweet Sixteen.” Next was Noblesville, which beat Peru and Kokomo by a total of five points, with a 5-game winning margin of 8.2. Muncie gained the “Sweet Sixteen” for the 26th time, thus breaking a 3-way tie for top honors with North Central Conference rivals Logansport and Kokomo, which have made it 25 times. The NCC champs from Delaware County also ran their re-' gional victory string to 10, one

Regional Scores At Columbus Madison 67 Greensburg 55 Columbus 77 Greenwood 63 Columbus 69 Madison 49 At Connersville Connersville 81 Batesville 53 Morristown 69 North Dearborn 53 Connersville 74 Morristown 61 At Covington ’ Crawfordsville 64 Rockville’ 53 Greencastle 62 Williamsport 53 Greencastle 51 Crawfordsville 48 At East Chicago East Chicago Washington 63 Valparaiso 42 Michigan City 88 Gary Roosevelt 83 East Chicago Washington 81 Michigan City 67 At Elkhart Goshen 99 Plymouth 67 South Bend Central 77 Columbia City 41 South Bend Central 53 Goshen 51 overtime At Evansville Tell City 82 Boonville 51 Evansville Bosse 65 Fort Branch 51 Evansville Bosse 60 Tell City 41 At Fort Wayne Berne 74 Fort Wayne Concordia 65 Angola 62 Albion 49 Berne 54 Angola 52 overtime At Huntingburg Ireland 75 Sullivan 63 Washington 55 Vincennes 49 Ireland 39 Washington 37 At Indianapolis Indianapolis Ripple 85 Danville 60 Southport 57 Alexandria 51 Indianapolis Ripple 71 Southpot 61 At Jeffersonville Seymour 76 Salem 65 Jeffersonville 66 Bedford 55 Seymour 54 Jeffersonville 48 At Kokomo Noblesville 62 Peru 58 Kokomo 84 South Whitley 54 Noblesville 69 Kokomo 68 At Lafayette Wells 67 Frankfort 64 Lafayette 92 Fowler 82 Lafayette 77 Wells 52 At Logansport Monticello 61 Knox 49 Royal Center 72 Rensselaer 60 Royal Center 66 Monticello 51 At Marion Huntington 60 Bryant 28 Marion 85 Bluffton 62 Huntington 69 Marion 61 triple overtime At New Castle New Castle 80 Parker 55 Muncie Central 64 Richmond 56 Muncie Central 69 New Castle 58 At Terre Haute Bloomfield 59 Martinsville 51 Terre Haute Garfield 71 Freedom 40 Terre Haute Garfield 67 Bloomfield 45

BOWLING Classic League W L Pts. Leland Smith Ins— 18 6 24 Victory Bar 14 10 20 Schrock Builder ... 15 9 19 Citizens Tele. C 0... 12 12 17 Gerber Supermkt— 11% 12% 16% West End Rest.ll 13 15 Decatur Farms .... 10% 13% 13% Preble Gardens ... 12 12 12 Reidenbech Eq. Co. 9 15 12 Leland Smith Life.. 7 17 11 High series: Pete Smith 647 . (246, 217, 184.) High games: L. Reef 203, A. Schrock 200. E. Shaw 203, R. Ladd 225, W. Tutewiler 234, W. Petrie 203, R. Scheumann 200, 205, C. Cook 232, R. Hollman 201, D. Graber 203. Women’s Major League W L Pte. Colonial Salon 18 6 24 Two Brothers 12 12 17 Aspy Standard -- 11 13 15 Three Kingsl2 12 15 Gene’s Mobile 9 15 13 Adams Trailerlo 14 12 High games: Lorna Bultemeier 186, L. CaU 181, I. Bowman 179, S. Schnepp 178, P. Clark 173, A. Gage 173, V. Smith 176. Splits converted: M. Miller 3-10, D. Johnson 2-7, M. Gage 6-7-10, J. Bedwell 6-7, B. Oehler 3-10, Lorna Bultemeier 3-10, Lorine Bultemeier 56, P. Clark 3-10. EDDIE’S RECREATION Ma A Pa Mixed Double* W L Pts. Shaffer’s Restaurant— 38 28 51 Davidson Bros. TV „ 37 29 50 Ideal Dairy Bar 29 37 41 Eddie’s Recreation „ 28 38 34 High games: Women — Jean Pickford 145, Shirley Pickford 138, Edith Kling 136, Marge Reed 154, Betty Feasel 141. Men—L. L. Davidson 174, Wayne Frauhiger 199, 179, 197, Fred Pickford 192. High series: Men—Wayne Frauhiger 575. Splits converted: L. L. Davidson 5-6-10, Shirley Pickford 2-7. Semi-State Pairings INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Pairings tor Saturday’s Indiana high school basketban semi-state tourneys: At EvansvUle — Ireland vs EvansviUe Bosse, Seymour vs Terre Haute Garfield. - At Fort- Wayne—South Bend Central vs Berne, Huntington vs NoblesviUe. At Indianapolis — Indianapolis Ripple vs Connersville, Columbus vs Muncie Central. At Lafayette — East Chicago Washington vs Lafayette, Greencastle vs Royal Center. short of the record 11 hung up by Frankfort in the early 19305. Kokomo’s regional streak ran out at five, but East Chicago won its fifth title in six years.

Indiana Whips Ohio, Illinois To Tournament By GARY KALE UPI Sports Writer The 1963 NCAA basketball tournament picks up momentum on three fronts tonight, but the season is over for a disillusioned Ohio State team that thought it had the ability to make it to the post-season carnival for the fourh straight year. Philadelphia is the scene tonight of an East regional tripleheader that pits New York U. against Pittsburgh, St. Joseph’s (Pa.) against Princeton and West Virginia against Connecticut. In Mideast regionals at Evanston, 111., Bowling Green faces Notre Dame and Loyola of Chicago meets Tennessee Tech. On the West Coast, Seattle plays Oregon State and Arizona State takes on Utah State in a twin bill at Eugene, Ore. Tournament competition opened at Lubbock, Tex., Saturday night in the first round of the Midwest regionals. Oklahoma City advanced to a semifinal date at Lawrence, Kan., Friday by defeating Colorado State, 70-67. Texas also moved up as the Longhorns trampled Texas Western, 65-47. Indiana Edges Buckeyes Ohio State, needing a victory to annex the Big Ten title and representation in the NCAA classic, fell before Indiana, 87-85, in overtime Saturday. Gary Bradds pumped in 32 points for the losers and Tom Bolyard scored 29 for the winning Hoosiers. Illinois tied Ohio State for the league title by defeating lowa, 73-69, and earned the NCAA berth because the Buckeyes were tournament performers for the last three years. Bill Small and Bill Burwell combined for 41 Illini points. Colorado also joined the tourney with a 69-56 victory over Kansas State that tied the Wildcats for the Big Eight title. The Buffalos had beaten State previously this season, thus earning entry credentials. San Francisco moved into a semifinal Far Western regional niche by edging Santa Clara, 62-61, on Dave Lee’s last-second free throw. That gave the Dons the West Coast Athletic Conference championship. The Big Six conference, however, was thrown into a playoff when UCLA whipped California, 72-53, and Southern California upset Stanford, 67-61. UCLA and Stanford play for the conference’s NCAA berth Tuesday night at Santa Monica, Calif. Wins Catholic Tourney Xavier of Ohio won the National Catholic College Tournament with an 89-75 decision over St. Bonaventure, at Louisville, Ky. Steve Thomas netted 34 points for the Ohioans. Creighton stopped Regis, 76-61, for third place. In NCAA college division regional finals, UPI small college champion Wittenberg (Ohio) defeated South Carolina State, 70-63; Northeastern edged Springfield, 47-45; Southern Illinois tripped Lamar Tech (Tex.), 93-84. in overtime; Philadelphia Textile beat Bloomsburg St., 54-48; Oglethorpe topped Tennessee State, 55-51; South Dakota State squeezed past Nebraska Wesleyan, 77-75; Fresno State toppled Chapman, 71-59, and Evansville set back Washington (Mo.), 85-75. Among major tournament-bound teams, Fordham defeated Holy Cross, 59-57; DePaul edged Dayton, 68-66; Oregon State downed Oregon, 71-65; Seattle beat Idaho, 95-88, and Connecticut lost to Colgate, 69-67, in overtime. The NAIA’s 32-team field swings into action tonight, with Grambling College (La.) favored to repeat its 1961 triumph. Big Ten Standings Final Standing W L Pct. TP OP Illinois 11 3 .786 1221 1138 Ohio State — 11 3 .786 1121 1083 Indiana 9 5 .643 1185 1062 Minnesota ..... 8 6.571 1045 1091 Michigan 8 6 .571 1076 1040 Wisconsin 77 .500 1053 1086 Northwestern .. 6 8.429 1043 1029 lowa - 5 9 .357 961 1031 Mich. State ... 3 11 .214 1103 1178 Purdue . 2 12 .154 1083 1194 CHKK PAMS OF ARTHRITIS RHEUMATISM Daap-tle** rtUtf. .. fart, when pein attack* of arinoe Arthritis, Rheu■mkUhb* « Miaculpr Aclmmi occur. That’* what you And that’* what you get when you taka PRUVO Tablet*. Proven jbrt, aqfa and qfeetiw over 15 year* at uae. OUR GUARANTEE: we the 76 tablet *i«e a* directed for 10 day*. Gives thte fair trial, PRUVO may help you. You must get the wonderful relief million* have or your monay back. At druggist* everywhere. SMITH DRUG CO.

Unglamorous Problems At Cape Canaveral

United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — The men and women who chose the glamor of exploring space for a living are facing some unglamoros problems just trying to live down here on earth. If this sprawling test center is “Spaceport U. 5.5..,” the supporting area around it certainly is •‘Boomtown U.S.A.** and like any good boomtown is has its peculiar headaches and heart throbs. Cape Canaveral is a sandy spit of land almost in the center of long, slender Brevard County. In 1950, it was a sleepy little county of 23,653 people, mostly native oldtimers and outlanders who moved here to “get away from it all” and quietly settle down. In 1960, the population had soared to 111,435. It was “booming Brevard" now, home of the free world's biggest space center. And by 1970, it will be the jumping off place for astronauts bound for the moon and other stations in space. Down on earth, Brevard’s population will be, by one estimate, 250,000. Growing Not Easy The growing has not been easy. The men and their families who came in with the space-age “new frontier” found, and are still finding. the accent on the word “frontier.” They found the score of relaxed little communities such as Cocoa and Melbourne and Titusville weren't ready. Everything carries a high price tag including housing. A man can find a place conveniently close to the Cape, but it comes at a price—Bloo per month or better for a simple efficiency apartment $l5O or better for two bedrooms. He can live further away—and still he pays, with gasoline bills and strained nerves from joining thousands of fellow workers in winding toward the job over roads that have been hard-pressed to stay two years behind the times. Food, as one housewife put it, “is out of the world—in cost.” Many of the newcomers even found water a pro Hem. The sul-fur-flavored tap variety makes a wicked cup of coffee, and bottled water is a standby. Schools are lacking simply because it takes time to construct them. Churches have, on occasion, held services in bowling alleys and theaters to house thenexpanding congregations. Income Soaring The per capita income is soaring, but the average family still has trouble making ends meet. But with that unique spirit of adventure that the gold-rushers of a century ago must have felt, they still come. By the end of 1963, more than 2,000 new construction workers will move in just to help the space agency expand the limits of the huge “spaceport” by another 90,000 acres. “I am tremendously concerned . .. that we will be in a frightful position to care for these people" said Donn Searle, president of the Titusville Chamber of Commerce. Even such » thing as trailer space for them is at a previum. The key words are “boom” and “expand,” the drive seems one of near desperation. On Cocoa Beach, one luxury motel after another springs up. Crash programs are spreading two-laned roads into four lanes as fast as road-making

A Th 9ttt, Lau) OF GIRL SCOUTING rea4«r ’’A Girl Scout is thrifty.** We welcome Girl Scouts cmd their adult leaders as savers atpurbaflkp we sAtun wom scours or rut I •* I V4A AM) WOSB WHO OUIM THCM (march 1046/ a: \ y aoMMuruL MANscnoo STATE BANK Established 1883 MBMBM -* MBMRtt fv«Bfv«Wß ovisfvairsK F. >•!• f. Federal Heerve

MONDAY. MARCH 11, 1963

machines can move. Boom To Keep Going The boom isn't going to die. There are too many things to keep it alive—the race for the moon, the stepped-up drive to master space for communications and weather forecasting and a score of Other purposes, the billions of dollars the federal government is pouring in. But the people themselves come for their own reasons. Donald Holt came here to open a restaurant, and now boasts a coast-to-coast reputation for good food. B. G. MacNabb came to spearhead the development of the nation’s first intercontinental ballistic missile, the Atlas. Henri Landwirth came to run a motel, and stayed because he made a fortune and because he likes the people—the ones he has seen come and go, the thousands yet to arrive. A lot come just to see what this business of space is all about. There are hardships, and grumbling about them is simply away of life. But there is a high spirit of adventure in the living, and perhaps they like the place because there’s literally no other like it in the United States, perhaps the world. Hockey Results NATIONAL LEAGUE Saturday New York 5, Montreal 2. Toronto 5, Detroit 3. Sunday Montreal 5, New York 1. Detroit 4, Boston 3. Chicago 1, Toronto 1 (tie). INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Saturday Port Huron 6, Fort Wayne 4. Muskegon 10, St. Paul 3. Minneapolis 6, Omaha 5 (overtime). Sunday Muskegon 6, Fort Wayne 4. Minneapolis 4. Omaha 3. New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY PRICES A. T. A T. 120; Central Soya 29%; du Pont 240%; Ford 43%; General Electric 74; General Motors 62%; Gulf OU 42%; Standard Ofl Ind. 53%; Standard OU N. J. 62%; U. S. Steel 45%. Our advertisers are for your HOME TOWN — DECATUR. Patronite them. -

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