Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 214, Decatur, Adams County, 11 September 1963 — Page 5
MEBHSaOAX. SEPTEMBER 11 1963
Decatur Youth, Two Others Sentenced Three Indiana college boys charged with tampering with an automobile owned by deputy sheriff Gordon Miller, Van Wert county, O appeared Monday before Van Wert municipal court judge Robert L. Harrington and were each fined SIOO and costs and sentenced to 30
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- -. » days in the workhouse. One of the young men was reported by the Van Wert TimesBulletin to be Robert Anderson, 20, Decatur (not relation to Decatur city attorney Robert Anderson). The other two names reported were Wayne Morris, 19, and Byron Nay, 20, both, of Fort Wayne. The trio was also ordered to pay $175 for damages to Miller’s auto out of their own money. V The suspects were apprehended Sunday morning by city police and “ TT 1 . . T 'T'f —-
the sheriff’s department in the vieijaity of their parked car at 654 N, Walnut street, Van Wert. S. J. Walter, the defendants’ attorney, told the court that the boys were all college students and had to get back to school. Judge Harrington pointed out that since the boys were college students they could be least excused for sUch conduct. “You should have had a higher sense of responsibility. I am sorry, you will just have to be late for college,” the judge said.
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■ !■■■■!■ ■ I ' M ■■ Showers, Cooler Weather Forecast By United Press International Scattered showers today and tonight will pave thb way for tooler weather in Indiana by Thursday, but a warming trend will develop by the weekend. Forecasters changed earlier predictions and said the moisture
will arrive sometime today and run its course before Friday, when a “fair and cool” day is in prospect. Highs Tuesday ranged from 81 at Fort Wayne to 90 at Evansville, and overnight lows this morning from 54 at Fort Wayne to 64 At Louisville. Highs today will range from 78 to 86, lows tonight in the 60s, and highs Thursday from near 70 to 80. ' The five-day outlook called lor
near normal temperature averages riorth and 1 or 2 degrees* > below normal elsewhere. Normal highs for this time of year are T 3 tq 83 and nbrmal lows are 51 to 60. Precipitation will total; around . one-tehth of ,en inch hi the northern third of the state the next five driys and one-fourth tb one-half inch elsewhere. More showers may occur in the north about Saturday or Sunday.
Enrollment Higher In Northern Wells Fall enrollment in NorthernWells county schools has increased by B1 students this year, superintendent J. McLean Benson reports. Benson listed total,enrollment for all schools in the district at 2,241 including 80 pupils in the private Bethlehem-Lutheran grade school. Enrollment at this time last year was 2,180.
PAGE FIVE
mWm 1 Mk JOINS NAVY—Robert Lynn Hall, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Hall of Geneva route 2, has enlisted in the U.S. Navy for four years, and is taking recruit training at the U.S. Naval Training Center at Great Lakes. He selected the Polaris electronic field in the Navy, according to recruiter Francis J. LaPlante, commisaryman first class. Fort Wayne. On completing his recruit training, Hall will be home on 14-day leave before .reporting to his duty station. Recruiter LaPlante Is in the selective service office in Decatur every Tuesday from 9 30 a. m. to 3 p. m. Report Alert For Possible Saigon Coup SAIGON. South Viet Nam (UPI) — An English language newspaper close to the South Viet Nam government charged today that an opposition leader living in Washington has alerted followers in Paris for a possible coup against the Saigon regime. The Times of Viel Nam, owned and published by an American couple who art' longtime friends of President Ngo Dinii Diem and the ruling Ngo family, identified the nationalist opposition leader as Nguyen Ton lloan. an exile leader of the Dai Viet party. It said Hoan had told Ids Paris followers that '‘certain American, ’official’ circles" are considering establishing a guerrilla underground in central Viel Nam to oppose tlie Diem government. The Times of Viet Nam is the same newspaper that published stories on two occasions last week saying that the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency was plotting a coup against the Diem government These reports were dismissed by U.S ofticiHls here and in Washington" as “nonsense.” The latest report of a plot came as a US military spokesman here reporled that Communist guerrillas overran (wo district capitals in (tie Communist-domi-nated Canau peninsula— of South Viet Nam in two fierce attacks Tuesday. The spokesman said at least 90 government troops were killed or wounded Government forces later reoccupicd the towns alter the Reds withdrew. in another development. Archbishop Ngo Dinh Time, brother of President Diem, left Rome for New York after a visit to the Vatican He reported there to the Vatican secretariat of state but md not have an audience with Pope Paul Vi. However, the archbishop said before his departure that tile Vatican has ordered him to say nothing further about the troubled affairs of his country. Meanwhile, stud en t unrest against the Diem government aj>peared to be growing amid reports that new demonstrations ore licing planned despite strict inilice precautions. Army troops and policemen v ere deployed throughout Saigon under orders to act ijutckly to prevent further disturbances by youths- protesting the government suppression of Buddhists and other ixilitical opponents. At least 2.300 college' and high school students were under arrest a: a result of a series, of antigovernment demonstrations which beg a n Saturday. Eight high schools were rinsed and guarded by troops The ■ regime of President Ngo. Dinh Diem claims the wave of student outbreaks has been fomented by Communist agents. It also lias charged the Buddhist movement is Communist-infil-ti ated Whiir uhsmt doubled the students could represent any major forte against the Diem government, they believed the student demonstrations redacted a spreading opposition to the government's policies and treatment of Buddhists in the current religious-political dispute. • % w
