Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 289, Decatur, Adams County, 9 December 1963 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Record Security = / ' .. r - J Guard For Johnson
NEW YORK (UPD—The police admitted today that a determined assassin could have killed President Johnson in spite of the record security guard laid on for the Chief Executive’s 2 1 /z-hour visit to New York City. "If someone had wanted to
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■ get the President, he could have done it,” said a veteran plain- : clothes policeman assigned to i Sunday’s protective , force. “There is no way to stop a deassassin.” ' vtrhe officer conceded, however, that it would have been > difficult for a sniper armed
with a high-powered rifle to have hit the President. A phalanx of 35 motorcycle policemen surrounded the closed presidential car throughout the visit and the .car itself was followed a few feet away by the “Queen Mary”—an armored convertible with its roof down manned by several Secret Service men, including James Rowley, chief of the federal agency charged with the responsibility of protecting the President and his family. Copters Fly Cover Two police helicopters hovered over the presidential car at an altitude of less than 50 feet. “It was the other means of assassination we were worried about,” the detective said. “Someone could have tossed a hand grenade under the car. There is just too much to watch.” The elaborate security arrangements for the presidential trip started last week when it was announced that Johnson would come to New York to attend the funeral of Herbert H. Lehman, the former governor who served two terms as a U.S. senator. At least one person was arrested for making threats against the life pf the President last week. - Omar Padilla, a 19-year-old Cuban national, was taken into custody on Saturday and held in $25,000 bail for allegedly declaring that he was going to kill the President during the visit. The, presidential plane landed at a remote part of the Idlewild Airport on the flight from Washington. Newsmen were permitted to watch the plane taxi in, but they were ordered into an area surrounded by iron railings that had been moved into place. They were not allowed to leave until the President had entered his car. Strict Security For the 18-mile trip from the airport to Temple Emanu-El on Fifth Avenue in mid-Manhattan where the funeral for Lehman was held, the security was just as strict. Policemen stood atop every tall building for a two-mile radius around the airport. Other officers were stationed along the highways at 50-yard intervals. They faced the thousands of homes and apartment houses along the route, scanning windows and rooftops for the glint of a rifle barrel or the flash of sunlight reflecting off a telescopic sight. The motorcade traveled at speeds up to 55 miles per hour. All traffic traveling in the same direction on the highways was stopped at access roads, but cars moving in the opposite direction were permitted to pass. In Manhattan, all streets on the route of the motorcade were closed off 10 minutes before it passed. Kept In Apartments People living on west 65 th Street, the location of the temple, were not permitted out of their apartments. One resident tried to go to the roof of his apartment building to see the President, but a policeman stationed ■ there ordered him back. The presidential p arty had been scheduled to travel back
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
to the airport immediately after the funeral. President Johnson diecided during the service, however, that he wanted to stop at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on the way back and see former President Herbert Hoover. The snap decision gave the, security officers about 20 minutes to set up protection at the hotel. Policemen immediately took up rooftop positions around the hotel and 80 officers began a security inspection. Johnson was inside the Waldorf for about 15 minutes.’ The motorcade then sped to Idlewild and the President was airborne on the flight back to Washington shortly after 2:30 p.m. STUDEBAKER (Continued from Page One) ond 10-day selling period of Novemlfer, Studebaker captured only 0.8 per cent of the market and its dealers were reported to have about an 86-day supply of cars on hand. Studebaker of Canada, Ltd., operates an automotive plant in Hamilton, Ont It has a work force of about 725 employes and Studebaker distributes its cars through a net gain of about 300 dealers. The dealers also handle Mercedes-Benz and Auto UnionDKW cars as they do in this country. More than 130,000 Studebaker cars have been assembled in the Canadian plant since it started operations in 1948. Other Studebaker divisions include Trans International Airlines, Franklin Appliance Division, Clarke Floor Machine Division, Gravely Tractor Division and the STP Chemical Compound Division. The end to Studebaker auto operations in Indiana also would mark the passing of an era in the Hoosier state, credited with the birth and early development of the “horseless carriage” since the days of Elwood Haines of Kokomo more than 60 years ago. The oncethriving auto industry in Indiana gradually gravitated to Detroit. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results. Skirt Shape-Up Printed Pattern Ik ■' i > I 11 ■ /fl x II / B ' I I 18-. 11 I II I 1 / o • I I I I I 11 I II 1 I LU «. w | I 1 J h •.: | IM \ if fl \ IHlljßjn L J I®® ti 19439 5 . WAIST ’ V 24"-32“ nr&Mcu** MOVE to 1964’s new fashion rhythm in skirts. Choose inverted pleats for a crisp look or graceful gore sfor a rippling effect. Printed Pattern 9439: Misses’ Waist Sizes 24 , 25 , 26, 28. 30. 32. Size 28 each skirt takes 1% yards 54-inch fabric. Thirty-five cents in coins for this pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin. Decatur Daily Democrat Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Name, Address with Zone, Size and Style Number. CLIP COUPON FOR 50c FREE PATTERN in big, new Fall-Win-ter Pattern Catalog, just out! 354 design ideas. Send 50c for Catalog.
ADAMS few* - Last Time Tonight - First Feature at 7 o'clock RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN “TWILIGHT OF HONOR” Nick Adams. Joan Blackman ALSO — Shorts 25c -65 c —o Coming Sun.—" Stolen Hours’* Susan Hayward & “Young Swingers’’
I Hi HI 1H H Hr' *» jJ B 9. BL mmBB wBBHBHH -■HF *■ f IB SB ' fjmmi %hO?*igr£Wffife -Bp I WKfl ~■ I 'RIBf BBBIpt BF- r^BiKiAjK* l . : : >-i:' ' 1 1 W" *" •J* IkdNM ' ‘ “' < ‘ 1 ' WkJ ■■ . jb 4 " w INSTALLED as new officers ofXthe Adams county Home Demonstration association in an impressive ceremony at the Community Center Friday were, left to right: front row, Mrs. Earl Yoder, treasurer; Mrs. Chester Isch, assistant secretary; Mrs. Richard Mailand, secretary; Mrs. Norman Young, second vice president; Mrs. Lee Fleming, first vice president; and Mrs. Chalmer Barkley, president. The out-going officers are pictured in the background. Left to right, they are Mrs. Kermit Yoder, treasurer; Mrs. Erwin Fuelling, secretary; Miss Icel Shanks, second vice president; Mrs. Merle Kuhn, president. Prior to these ceremonies a training school for all officers of the various clubs in the county was held. -sc'X Photo by Mac Lean)
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MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1963
Theft Os Hub Caps Charged To Youths Three Decatur boys have been referred to the local juvenile court for the theft of a number of automobile hub caps. Two of the youngsters are aged 15, and the third is 13. They wpre taken into custody Friday and Saturday last week, by city police and sheriff’s department authorities. The authorities took possession of 10 hub caps, stolen recently from four automobiles. The juvenile petition was filed this morning.
MASONIC % Regular Stated MEETING Tuesday, Dec. 10th 7:30 P. M. < Robert S. Workinger, W. M.
