Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 204, Decatur, Adams County, 29 August 1963 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Celina Discusses Off-Streel Parking The Celina city council this week discussed plans for an off-street parking lot to be located in the 209 block of Celina's South Main street. The council passed an ordinance authorizing the mayor to sign a 20-year lease on the land currently occupied by the Singer Sewing

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'Machine company, Borger and: .Mendenhall, the Kohn News agency l/artd a vacant store. The parking . lot land is owned by Mr. and Mrs. ; R. C. Kohn, who operate the news i agency, and by Grace Kohn Shaf-I fer. Under the terms of the lease' rent will be $3.600 a year. Included are an option to renew the lease ' for another 10 years, with the rent 1 to be negotiated and a provision that if the property should be of- • sered at private sale as part of an ! i estate, the city has first refusal. | Celina's search for off-street fa-' cllities actually began in March, . 1961. at a special council meeting i to discuss (he feasibility of convert-1 ing Main street from diagonal.to < parallel parking. Because of the li’sis in the total number of parking spades which this plan entailed it was opposed by the Chamber of Commerce. A committee was then appointed to study the program. I Now that the problem it settled j trie committee has been dissolved. The Chamber of Commerce is arranging for the destruction of the I buddings on the property. I Tom Grabill Attends Workshop Os Frat KNOXVILLE. Tenn. — Tom Gra-, bid of. 120 Porter Vista, Decatur,.' f Ind , was one of 600 deleagtes at- J * tending the 16:h annual leadership ; training workshop of the Sigma Chi fraternity held on the campus of the University of Tennessee here ' August 23-26. He is a Junior at Ball State' Teachers College, and a member of | , the Sigma Chi chapter there, of I which he is pledge-trainer. 4—lh«» fwm -<iay-- pFogram 7 - whieh at- |. traded Sigma Chis from the fratpr- ; nity's 138 campus chapters in 41 i states - of the United States and I four provinces of Canada, involved ’ delegates in lectures, panels and for outstanding chapter operations, discussions on methods and ideas activities, and scholarship. ■i i FAT OVERWEIGHT Available t<» ynti without a doctor’s prescription, our product- called .GA.LAXIIN_ Y.ou. musl lose ti.jx.ly...fa-L. . in 7 days or your money hack. No strenuous exorcise, laxatives, massage or takbng <>t‘ ko-< ailed reducing I candies, crackers, cookies or chewing gum GALAXON is a tablet and easily swallowed. When you take t’.ALAXuX, you s,till enjoy Vour ’ meals, still eat the foods you like, but voir simply don't have the'urge fort xtra portions bebausc'GA.LAX< »N depresses your < appetite and decreases your desire for food. Your weight must come down, because as your own doctor will tell you,’ when you eat less, y<»u weiprh less. Get rid oMexcess fat and live longer. GALAXOX costs <: oo and is sold ' on this Gi’AKANTKK- If not Satisfied (or any reason just return the I ’ package to your druggist ami get | your full motiev back No q-uestmns 1 ! asked. OALAXON is sold with this j | r'i lira nice by: . j Smith** Drug More - Decatur - Mail Order* Pilled.

1 New Fire Truck Is Purchased By Berne The city, of Berne has purchased ' a new fire truck to be used in providing fire protection for city and rural residents of the six southern townships of Adams county. The successful bidder for the I new truck was Midwest Fire Equipment company of Logans- ; port. The price is $24,364. The new truck utilizes a 750-. j gallon per minute pumper. It will be housed in Berne and will probably replace one or two of the old trucks a 1929 model and a 1939 model. The six southern townships will I pay to the city of Berne $5,600 per 1 year for the next three years for I the maintenance of the fire equipment which will be manned by local firemen. The contract ~ with the townships may be renewed after the three years if approved ! at that time by the township trustees and the advisory boards. Appeal Sentences In Gambling Case HAMMOND, Ind. (UPD — Four men, sentenced to federal prison terms in connection with a two-. ' state horse betting operation, 1 were free under bond today pendi ing anpeals to the U.S. Seventh . Circuit Court of Appeals. I The four, convicted July 10 of violating a new federal law agai hst inter state of gambling equipment—in this case scratch sheets, were sentenced Wednesday in U.S. District Court here. Judge George Beamer sentenced Frank Zizzo. 37, Hammond, to 15 ct.ncurrent five-year terms and I fined him SIO,OOO. Three of Zizzo’s i employes, Alex Strosky, 43, of] Griffith and Hugo Lazzareschi ■ and Walter Wajachowski, both of .Chicago, were sentenced to six months each and placed on probation for an additional 18 months. Zizzo posted SIO,OOO bond and the other three each posted $5,000 bonds pending the appeals. In sentencing the four, Beamer called the bookmaking operation in the Chicago and Chicago i Heights, 111., and Hammond areas : “definitely a syndicate operation.’’ Zizzo, who denied the charge, maintained that he had closed cigw.n his bookmaking activities in Hammond. Beamer conceded the point but said the shutdown had come after the four were convicted in July. The four were arrested by federal agents after an intensive ■ investigation. I If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want I ads — they get BIG results

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Chicago Board Moves Mobile Classrooms CHICAGO (UPD — Integrationists claimed a victory when the Board of Education agreed to remove mobile classrooms from a South Side school ground, but i warned today of more demonstrations if the units are moved, as planned, to other school sites in the area. The Rev. B. Elton Cox, director of the Congress of Racial Equality’s Chicago chapter, said there will be more demonstrations “at some other school” if the 19 units are moved. The school board voted Wednes- 1 * day to move the mobile classrooms to the Wentworth, Oglesby and Guggenheim schools. All are in the same area as the 73rd find Lowe site where racial demonstrators threw themselves in front of construction machinery this month to prevent the temporary units from being installed. Board members said students who would have attended classes in the mobile units at 73rd and Lewe would have to follow them to the other school sites. _ The decision to move the mobile classrooms was one of two vic tor ie s for integrationists Wednesday. The- Board of Education also approved\an out-of-court settlement of a school-kegregation suit filed by 20 Negro parents. Under terms of the settlement a five-member team of experts will study. . the “emotional and psychological problems that attendance at an entirely or predominantly Negro school causes pupils.” The five included President John Hannah of Michigan State University; President James M. Nabrit Jr. Os Howard University; Sterling McMurrin, former U.S. education commissioner and now a University of Utah philosopher; Philip M. Hauser, University of Chicago sociologist; and Lester Nelson, treasurer of the Ford foundation’s Fund for the Ad- j vancement of Education. Cox said the board’s two decisions acknowledged “that racial discrimination does exist in our school system. The board finally decided to look iat it rather than wink at it.” Frank M. Whiston, who headed a special committee .of Board of Education members which studied the mobile classroom problem, said the decision to abandon the site was opposed by School Supt. Benjamin Willis, for whom the racial demonstrators named the mobile classrooms “Willis wagons.”. However. Whiston said that Willis. the nation’s third highest paid public official, agreed to carry out the removal of the units if the board wished. Integration Spreads Deeper Into Dixie By United Press International School integration spreads deeper into Dixie today in the wake of an historic civil rights march on the nation’s capital which Negro leaders said gives impetus to the drive again?! racial discrimi- ' nation. The only white public school in Powhatan, Va., desegregates today, but many whites were expected to avoid the court-ordered integration by enrolling in a private school for whites only. North Carolina public school integration spreads to six more areas. Schools at Burlington, Gastonia, Shelby and Mount Airy and in Gaston and Curry counties were scheduled to accept their first Negro students. North Carolina’s largest cities already are integrated.

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Two Air Force Jets Missing, 11 Aboard MIAMI (UPI) — A large force o> planes and ships searched the Atlantic between the Bahamas and Bermuda today for two Air Force jet tankers missing on a refueling flight with 11 men aboard. A freighter reported sighting a life jacket about 250 miles southwest of Bermuda late Wednesday, and an Air Force search plane said it sighted a possible oil slick in the same area. The KCI3S aircraft, attached to I the Strategic Air Command (SAC), were returning to their home base at Homestead Air Force Base south of Miami when radio contact was lost with them Wednesday afternoon. They had refueled in the air two 847 jets from Schilling AFB in Kansas. The 847 s returned safety to Schilling. The Air Force called the mission routine, but would not say where the refueling took place or speculate on why both tankers vanished. Apparently there was no hint of trouble from . the tankers, attached to the 10th 1 bomb wing at Homestead. The life jacket was sighted by • the 450-foot freighter S.S. Azalea City from Wilmington, Del. The Air Force identified the missing men as: Capt. Julius O. Womack, 33, of Pioneer, La.; Capt. Donald G. Edson, 30; Capt. Alan C. Ferguson, 29, Elgin, Ill.; Capt. Richard A. Larson, 34, Minneapolis; Capt. Keith R. Goffin, 29, Bellevue, Ill.; Capt. Gerald A Gardner, 28, Lincoln, Neb.; Ist Lt. Melvin Pump, 29; Ist Lt. William E. Smith, 26, Memphis; M. Sgt. Carl H. Burris, 39; T.Sgt. Ray L. Fish, 30, and S.Sgt. Lyle E. Overlees, 25. 1 Hometowns of all of the men were not immediately available. The Air Force said six of the men aboard one plane and five on the other. Ferguson and Larson were the two pilots.

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Promises Made By Pres. Diem To Buddhists SAIGON, South Viet Nam (UPI) —South Viet Nam’s official press agency said today that President Ngo Dinh Diem has promised to remove police guards from Buddhist pagodas and free imprisoned monks and nuns who will obey the newly installed Buddhist leaders. The agency said Diem, whose

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government raided the pagodas last tVeek, imprisoning thousands of Buddhist leaders, will Jilace the pagodas in charge of the monks now in compiand. —lt said the president made these promises Tuesday to a delegation ot monks headed by Thich Thiejn Hoa, who was placed in charge of Buddhist affairs last weekend after the arrests. The agency said Hoa also heads a breakaway Buddhist committee called the Union ’ Committee for the Defense of Pure 1 Buddhism. ’ In another development, obser- ’ vers said Saturday’s national elec- * tions are expected to take place as scheduled, but they predicted ’ less than half the 6.4 million registered voters will take part. ! Opposition political leaders indi-

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cated they will not even bother --t-.c to put up candidates, and the Buddhists, whose following is more than 70 per cent of the population, have no plans to do so, U.S. military sources said there has been no appreciable difference in South Viet Nam’s war effort against the Communist Viet Cong guerrillas because of the religious crisis and the declaration of martial law. ■ They said the Communists have not stepped up their activity markedly since the start of the crisis. The dispute between Diem’s government and the United States deepened today with a government charge that Washington had distorted the crackdown on Buddhists.