Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 95, Decatur, Adams County, 22 April 1963 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. Entered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr President John G. Heller Vice President Chas. E. Holthouse Secretary-Treasurer Subscription Rates By Mail, in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $10.00; Six months, $5.50; 3 months, $3.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $11.25; 6 months, $6.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents. Peace Corps Tests Saturday Anyone who is 18 years old. or older, and who wants to qualify for the Peace Corps, should pick up a blank and fill in this week, as the placement tests will be given this Saturday at Fort Wayne, The new test just takes an hour, and will be given at the post office building at 8:30 a.m. To be eligible, applicants must either have submitted a questionnaire to the Peace Corps, or bring a completed questionnaire with them. More than 5,000 Peace Corps applicants are now at work in 45 countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America, or completing training for their overseas assignments. A college degree is not needed for many Peace Corps assignments. Applicants with general farm backgrounds might be assigned to agricultural projects without being highly skillled in any of the many agricultural specialities. Peace Corps opportunities cover hundreds of different kinds of jobs in education, health, agriculture, construction and community development. Volunteers may, if they desire, terminate their services overseas. They then receive cash to cover tourist-class air fare from the host country home. They can then add whatever amount they wish to travel where they please by the method they please. Up to to one-third of the accrued termination payment ($75 a month for two years) many be obtained abroad at time of separation. The remaining two-thirds will be received back in the U. S. Any high school senior who is 18 years of age, and wants to go to college, but hasn't too much money, should Seriously consider the Peace Corps. You will get two years of experience worth almost as much as a college education, and you will have saved SI,BOO towards your first year or two. In fact, when you return, If you attend extension classes for your first two years, and live at home while Working, you would easily be able to make it through college. Some of the volunteers, like those in Cameroon, can earn up to 12 semester hours of college work for off-time study. The editor, while serving in the armed forces, received one-third of his needed collge credits for off-time study. Ohio University is setting aside a number of graduate assist- — antship for returning volunteers — in fact, the & Peace Corps Volunteer, a regular publication, lists hundreds of opportunities for returning volunteers. There is still room for both opportunity and service to any American who really wants to try.

TV PROGRAMS Central Daylight Time

WANE-TV Channel 15 ■mil Father 6:lo—Early Evening News I:4l—Walter Cronkite — New* 7:oo—Shotgun Slade 7:10—To Tell the Truth — 1:00— I'Ve Got A. Secret B:Bo— Lucille Ball Show 9:oo'—Danny Thomas Show 9:lo—Andy Griffith 10:00—Password 10:10 —Stump the Stars 11:00—Late News 11:15—Sports 11:10—Award Theater 705—Dally Word 7:10 —Bob Carlin — News 7:26—lnternational Zone 7:H—Bob Carlin— News 8:00 —Captain Kangaroo I:oo—Debbie Draks 9:Bo—Divorce Court 10:30—I Love Lucy 11:00—The McCoys 11:30—Pete and Gladys literieoe 12:00 Love of Life 12:25 CBS News 12:30 Search for Tomorrow 12:45 Guiding Light 1:00 Ann Colone Show 1:25 News 1:30 As the World Turns 2:00 Password 2:3o—Houseparty 3:00 To Tell the Truth 3:25 CBS News 8:30 The Millionaire : ——- 4:oo—Secret Storm s:oo—facL* Powen’show Cveeleg 6::oo—Bachelor Father 6:3o—Early Evening News 6:4s—Walter Cronkite — News 7:oo—Sugarfoot 8:00—Lloyd Bridges Show B:3o—Red Skelton Show 9:3o—Jack Benny 10:00—Garry Moore 11:00—Late News 11:15—Sports 11:20—Award Theater WKJ64V Channel 33 MONDAY ■reais* 6:ls—Gatesway to Sports 6:2s—News — J Ack Gray 6:40 — The Weatherman „ 1:46 — Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:00 —Sea Hunt 7:3o—Monday Night Movie 9:30 —Art Linkletter Show 10:00 —David Brinkley’s Journal 10:30—Phone Number Conversation 11,-»0 —News & Weather 11115-rtocwts Today 11:20 —Tonight Show TVBBDAT 6:3o— American Goverment 7:oo—TodW Show 9:oo—Engineer John 10:00—Say When 10:25—NBC News 10:80— Ptay Tour Huaok 1 .

11:00—Th* Price i* Right 11:80—Concentration 12:00—News , Attar*... 12:1O—Weatherman 12:18—Wayne Rothgeb Show 12:30—Truth or Consequences 12:58—News 1:00—Best of Groucho Marx I:3o—Your First Impression 2:oo—Ben Jerrod 2:2S—NBC News 2:30—-The Doctors 3:oo—Loretta Young Show 3:3o—You Don't Say 4:oo—Match Game 4:2S—NBC News 4:30 —Make Room for Daddy 5:00—Boxo The Clown s:4s—December Bride 6:ls—Gatesway to Sports 6:2s—Jack Gray — News 6:4o—The Weatherman 6:4s— Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—The Deputy 7:3o—Laramie B:3o—Empire 9:3o—Dick Powell Show 10:30—Chet Huntley Reporting 11:00 —News and Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20 —Tonight Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 WON DA. T ■▼•ntag 6:00—5 P.M. Repo.-t 6:ls—Ron Cochran — News 6:3o—Quick Draw McGraw 7:00—“I Search for Adventure’’ 7:30 The Dakotas B:3o—Rifleman 9:oo—Stoney Burke 10:0fr—Ben Caaey 11:10—-Weathervane 11:15 —Checkmate TUBBDAT Montag 9:oo—Fun Time 9:3o—The Jack LaLAnne Show 10:00 —Mom’s Morning Movie 11:00—My Little Margie 11:30—Seven Keys Afteneva 12:00—21 Noon Report 12:80 Father Knows Best I:oo—General Hospital I:3o—Tennessee Ernie Ford 2:00 Day In Court 2:24 —Alex Drier News 2:3o—Jane Wyman 2’o0 —Queen for a Day 3:3o—Who Do You Trust 4:00 American Bandstand 4:3o—Discovery ’6B 4:ss—American Newsstand s:oo—Mickey Mouse Club s:3o—Superman Bveatag 6:00—6 P.M. Report 6:ls—Ron Cochran — NeWs 6:3o—Togl Bear 7 Zoorama 7:Bo—Combat B:3o—Hawlian Eye , 9:3o—Untouchables 10:30—Bell & Howell Close-up 11:00—News — Murphy Martin 11:10—Weathervane 11:15 —Wire Service ADAMS ‘‘Follow the Boys" Mon. 8:10.

Three From County In State Contests Mary Warren and Carmi Steffen of Adams Central high school and Larry A. Bieberich of Monmouth high school are among those who will compete for top scholastic honors in Latin, mathematics and Spanish in the finals of the 49th annual state high school contests Saturday, at Indiana University. These students are among the 936 high school students named to compete in the finals as a result of the regional contests held March 30 in 36 Indiana cities. Some 5500 students from more than 400 Indiana high schools participated in the regional contests. Competing in the finals at I. U. will be 544 in the math contests, 205 in Latin and 187 in Spanish. The examinations will be at 9 a.m. In the University’s field house and Ballantine had. Papers will be graded immediately by high school teachers. Departmental luncheons will be held at noon, with a musical program at 2:30 p.m. in the auditorium, following which the state winners will be announced and medals awarded. Also participating in the awards program will be 135 students from various parts of the state who won honors in the English division of the regional contests. These students were named from 1400 who took a three-hour essay exam to come to the I. U. campus for the honors program. There will be no final contest in English this year but medals, certificates and special awards will be awarded on the basis of the regional contest grades. Miss Warren will compete in the geometry division of the state finals, Miss Steffen in the firstye a r Spanish division and Bieberich in the comprehensive match division. Another Unmanned Satellite By Reds MOSCOW (UPI) — The Soviet Union today launched another unmanned space satellite in its program of outer space research. The official news agency Tass said the satellite was Cosmos 15, the 15th such vehicle put up since the Russians started the program designed to facilitate space flights by manIt was the fourth Soviet Sputnik launched this year—all within the last five weeks. Tass said the apparatus on board the Sputnik was functioning normally. Cosmos 15 carries scientific apparatus "designed to continue research of outer space,” Tass said. The satellite also carries a radio transmitter operating on a frequency of 19.996 megacycles, a radio system for precise measurement of elements of the orbit, and a radio-telemetric system for transmitting to earth information on the functioning of the instruments and scientific apparatus. Tass said the Sputnik’s initial period of revolution was 89.77 minutes. Its maximum distaitce from the earth was 230.39 miles and its minimum distance was 107.43 miles. Other Soviet satellites were launched March 21, and April 2 and 13. The April 2 launching was Lunik 4, an unmanned moon probe that missed the moon by more than 5,200 miles on April 6. The other two were Sputniks of the Cosmos series.

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I? |1 81 ■■■ ; 1 J ■ ■ 7 ". i “SsiSK" J-' w - ' .Ch. < ■ ■ ' Ji MISS ANN L. PRICE, above, granddaughter of Judge and Mrs. G. Remy Bierly of Decatur, has been elected president of the student council of Sacred Heart Academy, Louisville, Ky., for the 1963-64 school year. Sacred Heart has an enrollment of 800 girls. An active member of the junior class, she was co-captain of the girls’ hockey team, on which she has played since she was a ’frdtehman. She teaches diving at the Jewish community center in Louisville, and is president of her home room, treasurer of the 100 club, and a member of the ballet club. There were two other candidates for president, and campaigning was limited to the gym area, with campaign speeches there. Ann expects to major in psychology in college, after completing her high school studies. Her mother is the former Florence Marie Bierly, a graduate of Hartford Center high school, and of Ball State Teachers college. She later served in the U. S. Navy, attaining the rank of lieutenant, junior grade. Indiana Again Hit By Violent Weather By United Press International Violent weather hit Indiana today with windy, hail-bearing storms for the third time in six days. Hailstones the size of mothballs pelted the Indianapolis area during the night, and a storm with characteristics of a small tornado ripped the roofs from a barn and house and uprooted trees in the Jamestown area. At Indianapolis, the state’s largest high school closed for the day when lightning knocked out the electrical system at Tech, giving 4.600 pupils a holiday. The storms came during a severe weather alert issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau, a warning which was lifted with an all-clear bulletin in the wee hours of the morning. Further showers and thunderstorms were due today with the : possibility of up to two inches of rain locally over the southern twothirds of the state. The third round of storms was confined to the central area. The first round last Wednesday hit the northern portion, and the second late Friday attacked southern areas. * « Rainfall during the 24-hour pe--riod ending at 7 a.m. today included Indianapolis .95. Chicago ,13y Cincinnati 32, Louisville .22, Lafayette .14 and Fort Wdyne .04. Temperatures hit highs Sunday ranged from a chilly 55 at South Bend to a summery 85 at Evansville. Indianapolis, the midway point between the two cities, also had a midway temperature of 71 between the extremes. Overnight lows ranged from a cool 41 at Lafayette to a warm 63 at Evansville. Highs today will range from the 50s north to 76 tc 86 south, lows tonight from the 40s to 50, and highs Tuesday from near 50 to near 60. The rainfall was expected to run its course over most of the state by tonight, although there was a chance of showers in the southern third Tuesday. Wednesday Will be mostly fair with a slight warming. The five-day outlook called for temperatures averaging 2 to 4 degrees below normal central and south and 5 degrees below normal north. After cooler Tuesday, there will be a warming trend from midweek to the end of the week. Precipitation through the week will average.-about one-half, inch north to one-half to three-fourths inch central and south, mostly late in the week...

Timber, Brush F ires Flare In East U. S.

By United Press International Timber and brush fires still flared across the eastern half of the nation today while weary foresters tallied a weekend toll high in human lives, homes and woodland. Three persons were dead and more than 200 injured in the series of fires which swept tinderdry forests and fields, factories and urban areas. Marines, sailors, policemen, homeowners and students joined battle with fire-fighters and foresters against the ravaging flarpes. “It’s so extremely dry that the leaves are just like gunpowder,” said one Virginia forester. “All it takes is a spark.” Rangers fought through the night to contain spectacular blazes in Virginia and -West Virginia. A fire in Morgan County, W.Va., raged out of control and swept eastward Authorities said no communities were in immediate danger. Flames Near Town A blaze in Panther State Forest destroyed more than 1,000 acres of'timber by today. A flaming ridge-to-ridge inferno near Welch, W.Va., was reported under control and another fire on the 7,000-acre forest property of the famed Greenbrier resort at White Sulphur Springs also was contained. Shenandoah National Park in Virginia was declared on a fire emergency status while hundreds of volunteers, including soldiers, sailors and Marines, were aided by six airplanes in fighting about 250 fires throughout the state. Foresters said some 10,000 acres of Virginia woodland were destroyed during the weekend. Hundreds of persons were left homeless when flames raced through pine forests in three New Jersey counties. Fire officials reported 236,000 acres destroyed. Two persons died fighting the tow20 Years Ago Today April 22, 1943—There were 4,330 pounds of tin, collected in Adams county in the scrap metal drive, taken to the Fort Wayne concentration center today. Mrs. V. J. Bormann, clerk in the county clerk’s office, has been appointed assistant county health officer. Mrs. Harold Zwick has been appointed a public assistance visitor in the Adams county public welfare department’s office. Some food prices in Decatur today: pork loin roast, 33 cents per pound; veal rump roast, 29 cents per pound: doughnuts, 12 cents per dozen; sirloin steak, 40 cents per pound; butter, 51 cents per pound; bread, two loaves for 19 cents. American airmen are called on to avenge the execution of fellow airmen by Japanese.

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ering flames 98 were injured and 245 homes were consumed. Fire ravaged three factories and six homes at Bayonne, N.J., Satursday, injuring 27 firemen and touching off violent explosions. “Bomb” Devastation “It looks so bad, you’d think the bomb had been dropped,” said a policeman who had been at the site of the fire for 15 hours. A blaze in a natural gas well at Gray, Okla., stormed out of control for 24 hours, killed one workman and injured two others before being brought under control Sunday. Some 118 forest and brush fires swept Massachusetts during the weekend. Firefighters battled 110 separate blazes in Kentucky and Gov. Bert Combs was asked to close to the public the state’s easternmost forest areas. One of the worst fires of the weekend., swept a 10-mile square area of "Staten Island, off lower Manhattan, Saturday. More than 100 homes and buildings were destroyed and much of the island’s wild life died. More than 70 per cent of New York City’s fire-fighting equipment was called out to battle the Staten Island blaze, a fire in Brooklyn and flames which swept five buildings in QueensEight Persons Dead In Weekend Traffic By United Press Interatfonal Two accidents killed five of the eight persons who lost their lives in Indiana traffic during the weekend, raising the state’s 1963 toll to at least 313 compared with 296 last year. Three persons were killed in the weekend’s worst accident Saturday on U.S. 27 north of Lynn. They were Gene Thompson, 37, Warren; Ralph J. Myers, 30, Warren, and William Boggs, 20, Cincinnati, Ohio. Police said Boggs apparently swung his car across the center line of the highway into the path of the oncoming car driven by Thompson. Three others were critically injured. Jesse Hostetler, South Bend, and his wife, Iva, 65. were killed early Sunday when their car collided with a truck 30 miles south of LaPorte on U.S. 6. Richard E. King, 40, Junction City, Wis., the turck driver, was unhurt.

Charlie Howard, 40, Gary, died Saturday night of injuries suffered seven hours earlier when his car crashed into guard posts on Indiana 10 near Argos. ClarenCe Baker, 39, Indianapolis, was killed Saturday when his car collided head-on with another car in Indianapolis. Dennis Whirledge, 2, Millersburg, died of a broken neck Saturday after his head struck a railroad underpass as he rode on a hay wagon in Elkhart County.

LACKLAND AFB, Tex.—Airman Basic Michael W. Schultz of Decatur, Ind., is being reassigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., for technical training as a United States Air Force finance and statistical data specialist. Airman Schultz, who enlisted in the Air Force a short time ago, has completed his initial basic military training here. The airman is a 1962 graduate of DecatuF Catholic high School. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo F. Schultz, reside in Decatur. Drip Catcher To keep wax drippings from your candles off your table or tablecloth, wrap the butt end of the candle

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