Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 159, Decatur, Adams County, 8 July 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. z— 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.

$lO Million Tax Cut? One of the questions before Congress this session is this: Should Federal income taxes be cut $lO million? A passing glance would tell you that most people would approve of this. A second glance would remind many to qualify their first thought —a tax cut only if the budget is also cut $lO million. " And now we come to the interesting question: should the national budget be brought into balance? This is a question which we propose-to discuss at length this week. Most of us literally “quake in our boots” at the though of the billions of dollars spent by our government each year. Here in the midwest we hear incessantly the “gloom and doom” philosophy that We are economically treading down the wide and easy path to perdition. Let’s consider an ordinary case. Suppose a prominent businessman, or Senator Barry Goldwater, were’to make the following statement. How would you consider it? “As a practical businessman I have enough sense to know that if you spend more than you take in, something is radically wrong. It’s even more wrong that we are spending our children’s and our grandchildren’s money. The history of deficit spending is a history of failure — we have had 28 deficits in the past 34 years, to no effect. — Most of us do not worry about the debt only because it is so big yrj can’t comprehend it; if it were smaller we would be more concerned because then we would understand its dangers better. “A few economists, I know, would have us believe that the debt is unimportant because ‘we owe it to ourselves” whatever that means. Well, 1 have an old-fashioned conviction ,that debts have to be paid back some day. If the holders of these Federal promises to pay should lose their confidence in the government, we would have the most terrible economic collapse ever seen. I conclude then that the greatest moral danger facing our country at the moment is the danger of deficit spending.” Sound typicaH ILis-fairiy_typical of remarks that pass everyday in Decatur as good common sense. This week we will consider these ideas, and see just how sensible they really are. We may just find that a greater moral danger than “deficit spending” is the danger of ignorance masquerading as morality, and passing it from father to son family to family, as knowledge, when it is really a misconception.

TV PROGRAMS

WANE-TV Channel 15 MonDAT reals* 6:oo—Bachelor Father 6:3o—Early Evening News B:4s—Walter Cronkite — New* '7:oo—Shotgun Slade 7:30—T0 Tell the Truth *:oo—l’Ve Got A Secret t B:3(>—Luey Show.-9:00—-Danny Thomae Show 9:3o—Andy Griffith 10:00-—Password 10:30—Stump the Stars 11:00—Late News 11:16—Sports 11:20—Award Theater TV BSD AY Moralas 7:l6—Dally Word -r 7:20—80b Carlin — News 7:2s—College of the Air 7:65—80b Carlin —News B:oo—Captain Kangaroo - ’ it-Adv eut uhes i n i’aradise 10:00—Strike It Right 10:30—1 Love Lucy i 11:00—The McCoys 11:30—Pete and Gladys Afternoon 12:00 Love of Life 12:25.. CBS News 12:30 Search for Tomorrow 12:45 Guiding Light 1:00 Ann Colone Show 1:26 News 1:30 As the .World Turns 2:00 Password 2:3o—Houseparty 3:00 To Tell the Truth 3:25 CBS News 3:3o—Edge ol Night 4:00-—-Secret Storm 4 :30—Millionaire 6:oo—Jack Powell Show evening 6: :00—Bachelor Father 6:3o—Early Evening News 6:46—Waller Cronkite — NeWa 7 :00—Sugat (dot 8:00—Lloyd Bridges Show 8:30 Talent S. ..fits 9:3o—Picture This . 10:60 -Keele Bras.-.He 51,.,w 11:00—Late News. 11:16—Sports ' 11:20 —Golf Tip11:25—Award Theater’ WKJG-TV Channel 33 MONDAY ■veals* 6:l6—Gatesway to Sports 6:2s—News --- Ja< k Gray 6:4o—The Weatherman 6:46—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Sea Hunt 7:30 —Monday Night Movie 9:Bo:—Art Linkletter Show 10:00—Special 10:30—Nir Lucky 11:00—News * Weather 11:16—Sports Today 11:20—Tonight Show TVKSDAY Morning 7:oo—Today Show 9:oo—Engineer John 9:3o—Coffee Break I:l*—FalthTo Uys My

Central Daylight Tima

10:00—Say When 10:25—NBC News o-io—Play Tour Hunch 11:00—The Price Is Right 11:30 News 11:40 Weather 11:15 All Star Baseball * Afternoon 3:oo—Loretta Young Show 3:3i> You Don’t Say 4:oo—Match Game ' 4:25—-N’ 4:3o—Make Room for Daddy 6:00—Bozo The Clown aiveala* s:4s—December Bride 6:ls—Gates way to Sports 6:2s—Jack Gray — News 6:4o—.The Weatherman _ 6:46—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—The Deputy 7:3o.—Laramie —- B:3o—Empire . •9:3« Dick Powell Theater • ■111:30 SjUM.-ial 11:00—News and Weather — 11:15-—Sports Today 11:20—Tonight Show WPTA-TV > Channel 21 A monuai Sven lag 6:00—6 PM Reppet 6:15—.R0b Cochran ■ News 6:3o—Quick Draw McGraw 7:00—"1 Search for Adventure" 7.:30 The Dakotas 8:2 11 Funny Films 9:W> Stoney Burke 10:0b -Ben Casey lldui - Murphy Martin News 11:10 - \\ ea t hervane 11:15 -Steve Alien Show TUBSDAI Morning - 9:oo—Fun Time . - 9:30 The Ja.-k LaLanne Show 10:00—Mom’s Morning Movie 11:00—My Little Margie 11 30—Seven Keys Afternoon 12 on. - 21 Noon Report 12:30 Fattier Knows Best I-’"' General Hospital * 1 jo T.nn.efc.e Ernie Ford 2 99 Day In Court 2 24—Alex Drier NeWi 2. 39—Jam Hyman - I for a Day I:3o—Who Do You Trued 4:00 American Bandstand I 30—Discovery ’63 •'55 -American Newsstand. t oo—Ji < key Mouse Club t jo—Superman Evralna 6:00 C PM Report 6:15 Ron Cochran — News 6:3o—Yogi Bear I : oo—Zopfunia 7:3o—Combat 8(30- Hawaiian Evo 9:3o—Untouchables 10:30 Fie iH.--.Tn Ahicrlcn * —' 11:00 News — Murphy Martin 11:10— Weathervane 11:15 Steve Allen Show-DRIVE-IN , “Tile Stripper" Sun..* Mon 8:45; 1 assword Is Courage" 1U:45. ■ Breakflirt At Tiffany's" Tues A >'«d. 8:15; "Police Nurse" 11 p.m.

Nikita Snubs Chinese Reds In Conference MOSCOW (UPD—Premier Ni. kita Khrushchev, remaining far from Moscow in a seemingly calculated snub to the Chinese Communists, met in the Ukraine today with former ANTO Secretary General Paul-Henri Spaak. The official Soviet news agency said that Khrushchev—remaining far from the Moscow scene of negotiations between Soviet and Chinese leaders—conferred with Spaak, Belgium’s foreign minister, in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. Khrushchev and Spaak were discussing East-West problems in the Soviet premier’s first meeting with a Western statesman since relations between Moscow and Peking worsened in recent weeks. The Soviet premier, who had returned to Moscow only last Thursday from an East German visit, Was disclosed Saturday to have gone to Kiev. His trip was considered a rebuff to the Chinese Communists meeting with high Soviet party officials, in Moscow. The secrecy-shrouded Moscow talks continued today as Western diplomats predicted that the SinoSoviet struggle for Communist leadership would have little effect on the Kremlin’s basic attitude toward the West. The diplomats said the current Moscow idological talks are concerned with the means rather than the ends of Communist doctrines. Moscow and Peking agree, they said, that communism should wipe out Western capitalism and their dispute is over whether this should be accomplished through Moscow’s policy of peaceful.competition or Red China’s policy of armed revolution. The diplomats said that Khrushchev, therefore, might pursue talks with Western leaders on key issues of tension, but would not lose sight of the Marxist-Leninist goal of Communist control of the world.

Shriner Convention Takes Over Chicago CHICAGO (UPD— Chicagoans are very blase—until the Shriners come to town. A Shriner’s bagpipe and drum band marched out of their downtown hotel and started down the street, pipes wailing. Passersby stopped, stared, listened and then started following. Before long the band moved up State Street with about 50 citizens in tow—just like the Pied Piper. And the pied-pipering, re dfezzed Shriners—a half million of them—started their second day of leading the Chicagoans to the cliffs of their madcap fun. The downtown area was alive today with antique cars whipping through weekday traffic, blowing bizarre horns and flying multicolored pennants. Tuesday morning the first of two gigantic Shriners parades will be held—with an estimated 25.000 marchers. The parade is expected to last six hours. The second parade will be held Thursday. The Shriners—officially meeting here for the Masonic order’s fiveday 89th Imperial Council session —were not content to take over Chicago. They set up their own city, complete with post office, police and fire -departments, on the fourth floor of Chicago’s Palmer House Hotel. Imperial Potentate George M. Klepper of Memphis, Tenn., was nametf'-the city’s mayor. Twenty chartered trains and uncounted private forms of transportation brought the fezzes flocking to the city: Orders Withdrawal Os U.N. From Congo GENEVA (UPI) — United Nations Secretary General Thant has ordered the complete withdrawal of. U. N. troops from the Congo, by the end of this year it was officially reported today. Staff aides said ThahL Who* is visiting in Geneva, directed that arrangements be made for the pull-out by Dec. 31. ~..'

ASSOCIATE BSC DEGREE Phone 741-1354 Fort Wayne, Ind. Sepletnl) er 16 * Business Administration & Finance \ With * Secretarial Science | D k k * Professional Accounting ) IsDolVle

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Slate Makes Strides: On Discrimination EAST CHICAGO, Ind. (UPDGovernor Welsh told a negro women’s group Sunday his administration has made strides toward* eliminating racial discrimination in state employment. During the past two and one-half years of his administration, Welsh said the number of non-white professional and technical employes was almost doubled. In clerical jobs, he said the number of non-white workers is up 50 per cent. Welsh said when he took office in 1960 there were 20 departments of state government which did not have a single non-white employe. He said this has been reduced to 11 departments. “The number will drop to zero if qualified Negroes can be found to fill the positions available,” he said. •- Welsh spoke at the 60th anniversary meeting of the Indiana State Federation of Colored Womens Clubs, saying the “time for fine words and little action is passed.” He said the “full moral, administration and legal force” of Indiana government is behind the effort to “secure for non-white Hoosiers the rights to which they always have been entitled.” But the governor added the state employes represent a small percentage of the total work-force. .“We must depend on the cooperation of business, industry and labor if there is to be meaningful equality of opportunity for all our people,” he said. Crawfordsville Girl Named Miss Indiana MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (UPD— Marcia Jane Pinkstaff, 19, a blond, blue-eyed Butler University junior from Crawfordsville, will carry Indiana’s hopes into this year’s Miss America pageant. Miss Pinkstaff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. K. E. Pinkstaff, was chosen Miss Indiana late Saturday night ovbr 14 other contestants. Besides qualifying for the national contest at Atlantic City, she received $1,500 in scholarships and a new wardrobe. Miss Pinkstaff, who presented a drhmatic reading in the talent part of the competition, measures Asked to name the person she would be most anxious to interview, she told the judges her choice was blind author Helen Keller, because “a person like Helen Keller seems to have more courage than you and I in spite of her handicap.” «C , Runners-up in the beauty pageant, in order, were Marcina Ann Greene, 18, Fort Wayne, Miss Northeast Indiana; Colleen Kelly, 18, West Lafayette, Miss Purdue; Betty Jean Carroll, 19, Fort Wayne, Miss Indiana University,, and Jeanne Ruth Thomas, 23, North Judson, Miss Knox. Nine Persons Killed In German Collision STUTTGART,* Germany (UPD ■ Nine persons including six British tourists, were killed Sunday in a collision involving a tourist bus and several other vehicles. Police said three West Germans died in the collision and 29 persons, most of them bus passengers, were injured. After the crash, the bus plunged over an embankment and hit a railway 50 feet below. COURT NEWS Finds For Flslnilfl In the case of the National Milk Supply, Inc., vs Max Shutt, on a complaint on account, a petition in garnishment was submitted to the court for hearing and determination,'and the court found for the plaintiff. Agreement Reached In the case of the Associates Investment Co. vs. John R. Hart, on a complaint on contract, the parties agreed and the court ratified and approved, that the plaintiff will withhold $5 per week from thq defendant’s salary until the judgement of $561.60, plus costs and interest, is paid in full.'

One Policeman Is Killed In Kansas Riot GARNETT, Kan. (UPI) — Two young men, proud of their bodies and anxious for the sun to tan them, wore bikini - style, bathing suits while watching the Lake Garnett Grand Prix road races. An elderly woman saw them and was shocked. She complained to police about the “indecent exposure.” Police arrested the two young men. Neither of the young men nor the woman was identified. But the incident touched off a riot early Sunday in which one police officer died and 50 persons were injured. When police jailed the two young men Saturday, the word spread quickly among the thousands of beer - drinking racing fans here. Most of them had gathered in taverns after the first day’s races were completed under a broiling sun. The friends of the two jailed young men claimed police would not allow t hem t o post bond for the release of their companions. They rallied others to their support. Chants Os “Freedom” A crowd gathered near the jail. Chants of “freedom, freedom!” swelled as more fans joined the demonstration. Policemen- their dispositions melted by the heat and the work always associated with the races here—began arresting the ringleaders. The chanting fans and police began a-“-shoving match. Then someone lighted a firecracker. The staccato explosions of more firecrackers followed. The diturbance brought ' more fans to the front of the little jailhouse on the town square. The strength of the crowd grew to about 1,000, then increased to as much as an estimated 1,500. The Shovers began wrestling with police. Police called for help. Firemen rolled out the hbses. And then the riot began in earnest. The young fans began hurling beer cans, bottles, rocks and firecrackers at their uniformed foe. The foe-retaliated with the highpressure fire hoses. One fire hose was slashed. Another manned by fire men was overrun by the young fans, who then fought back with a water hose of their own. Becomes Battleground The square of this little eastern Kansas community of 3,000 became a battleground. Ambulances were summoned. The Kansas Highway Patrol sent reinforcements. So did the National Guard. Then, in the middle of the water fight, policeman Robert Cowden of nearby Ottawa fell to the ground and didn’t get up again. He was taken to the Anderson County Hospital. Cowden, 42, and the father of six, had suffered a heart attack. He was dead. Beer cans crashed into the heads of two firemen, lacerating their scalps. A young girl, screaming encouragement to the rioting fans, suddenly began screaming in pain. A beer bottle had smashed into her face and broken. “It was a shame," said one policeman who saw her. “She was disfigured terribly.” Use Tear Gas More persons fell —police and fans - and they were rushed to the community’s tiny hospital. National Guard troops, with bayonets fixed to the ends of their heavy rifles, kept the fans away from the jail. But the crowd didn’t disperse. ) So police fired tear gas bombs. Many of the rioters scattered, I running through Jhe_ streets with | tears Streaming down their faces, i The crowd broke up. Mayor Gwinn Shell told the racing fans Sunday he hoped the riot would not affect the future of the Lake Garnett Grand Prix. And in Ottawa, the wife and six children of policeman Robert Cowden Went into mourning.

FOR INSURANCE PROTECTION CALL 3-3601 COWENS INSURANCE AGENCY 209 Court Street PHONE 3-3601 L A. COWENS JIM COWENS

Dedicated Pupils At Space College

By LEON DANIEL .?■.' United Press International CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — You .won’t find any halls of ivy at the nation’s only space Engineering college. But what you will find at Brevard Engineering College, about 20 miles down the coast, is a faculty made up of some of the nation’s top scientists and engineers. The part-time instructors lecture in classrooms filled with dedicated student? whose average age is 30. ‘ Most of the students and nearly all the faculty members are employed at missile and space technological centers at Cape Canaveral and Patrick Air Force Base. Sparked by space-race industries which have grown up along the coast near the cape, Brevard is the first college in the United States to offer a master of science degree in space technology. Vine-covered walls would seem out of place at Brevard, where theories chalked on a blackboard may be used the next day in dealing with a real missile-track-ing situation. With the rapid advance in space science, some of the school’s teachers must write their own textbooks. While five-year-old Brevard may be too young to have traditions, it is sophisticated enough to offer such lofty courses as celestial mechanics, space medicine and a lang , list of sydaiexts ;in higher mathematics. The college was established in 1958 by Dr. Jerome P. Keuper, now its president, and a group of scientists who worked with Keuper for the Radio Corporation of America Service Company. Need More Education Keuper said they started the college because they saw the need for still higher education for the Well-educated people in

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the space field. , “We learned that many scholars and other space experts hesitated to come to Cape Canaveral because they could not continue their studies here,” Keuper said. Os the school’s.. 700 students, Keuper said about 165 are grad? uate engineers working for master'’’degrees. The rest of the students are undergraduates, some of whom are taking a few Special courses and others who are working toward a bachelor of science degree. Keuper takes great pride in his ability to stretch - his education dollars, which hq spends a good part of his time soliciting from private sources. “We built this building we’re in now for $7 a square foot,” he said proudly, adding that other school buildings in the area have cost" twice as much. “What we need now is somebody who wants to have his name on a new library building," Keuper said. “I believe we could build it for $60,000. We already have the books.” Watches Costs Closely Keuper keeps a tight rein on operation costs. He, a single faculty member, a clerk and a janitor are the only full-time ' employes at the college. Keuper said the school, so far, has received no local, state or federal aid, but he gave the impression he Wouldn’t turn it down if»it were offered. Kewper. jwmA . ajt the major companies near here Working on | government missile contracts ap- [ prove of the college as away for their employes to progress in their fields. Many of these companies make donations to the School as well as pay the tuition of their employes, he said. Keuper, a 42-year-old native of Newport, Ky., who holds a bachelor of science - degree in physics from Massachusetts Institute of

".{5-- ■ ' . ■ ■ ■/s ' ■l° '■ MONDAY. JULY S, IMS ~

Monroe Senior Boosterettes The Monroe Senior Boosterettes met Friday at Pine Lake. Pledges were led by Linda Genth and Verna Adler, with Miss Adler also giving the devotions. Demonstrations were given by Ann and Jane Inniger, Darlene Rich, Verna Adler, and Arlene Dennison. Swimming and refreshments qf watermelon Were then enjoyed by the club. ■' > . ' ' ■ Native Os Decatur Dies In Oklahoma Mrs. Robert Mills has received word of the death of her aunt, Mrs. Bill (Nell Myers) Lantz, of Tulsa, Okla. She was born in this city and was graduated from the Decatur high school. .« Surviving are her husband and a sister, Mrs. Andrew Harting of Tulsa. The late John T. Myers and Richard D. Myers were brothers of Mrs. Lantz. Technology and a masters degree in physics from Stanford University, said he is in the education field to stay. “I intend to devote the. rest, of aunt my life to building the best spacescience college in the world right here,” he said.

MASONIC Regular Stated MEETING Tuesday, July 9 7:30 P. M. Robert S. Workinger, W. M. 7—