Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 11, Decatur, Adams County, 14 January 1964 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
, M,¥ h<.h.. , V ; ..- • ? . f ■.•■■' .■ w V .’* 4 ■ •’. • PLOW ’EM UP— Ben Hower of the city street department is pictured above removing snow from Second street, a task which the street department began Monday and was continuing today. — (Photo by Mac Lean)
' • . • • ■ . . ■ .- ’ ‘ . • - • / - | SWAN DlVE?— Several local youths went swimming Monday afternoon, although with a new twist—swimming in the snow. — (Photo by Mac Lean) f: : •;.‘ v-’-’rtr J? -: ‘' ‘ ■ - .':'• '■. :.''‘;i'» i -‘ •■: ’~~ ~~ 1 *-■■'• . •.? •*, . '\V. -—JT F* ♦ ■', ' .e* ', -T" ? ' ■ •,' t • ■ : • * S: > •> ••’>’■«& isJfif- •Wi-XMHBfe'-jf ■ - , X i4 s3i£j*' '■■ ■’ F * &;/ ' ~^r , » j *’■ ttmir * - rf-.LJn L -. _■'' OUTDOOR WRESTLING— Jim Peterson, on the bottom, and Terry Sieger, two young Decatur residents, battle in a wresting match on a soft cushion—several feet of snow. —(Photo by Mac Lean)
NATION'S (Continued from Page One) most edge, mountain passes in Colorado were still snowpacked and temperatures dropped to 35 below at Fraser and 32 below at Alamosa. Continuing cold stretched through the SouthOand. Temperatures were freezing or close to it along she Gulf Coast and the Palm Beach, Fla., early morning temperature was 39. Weathermen warned of a hard freeze tonight in extreme northern Florida. At the storm’s height, Boston was practically paralyzed, gale winds of 60 miles per hour
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whistled through New York streets, a state of emergency was declared in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and Pensacola, Fla., had its first snow in five years. Urges Tobacco Sales To Minors Halted WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. J. Edward Roush. D-Ind., called upon local law officers Monday to enforce laws against the sale of tobacco products to minors. t Roush said the report of the surgeon general’s committee on the health dangers of smokmg was “an indictment . . . which by no means should be sloughed over or ignored.”
Films Are Available At Decatur Library The following 16 mm films are on deposit from the Indiana librarb film circuit in the Decatur public library for the month of January. Reservations are urged , for showings td organizations, ’ clubs, church groups, etc. ADVENTURING IN CONSERVATION — 14-c — Shows boys and girls as they discover interdependence of plants and animals in nature’s communities; how man destroys or upsets these communities. Emphasizes importance of natural resources and what we can do to conserve them. Points out camping practices which will help conserve natural resources. (Indiana University). COPPER. THE OLDEST MODERN METAL — 28-c-s —Animated sequences charify copper’s atomic structure, relate it to the element’s physical and chemical properties, and help explain the complexities of processes that win the red metal from its ores. The contemporary musical score lends nace and emphasis to smoothly integrated scenes that cover each nhase of the copper story from exploration for ore deposits to the use of Conner in manufacturing manv things important to modern life. (Loaned by U. S. Bii’-oau of Mines'. ... « , FGVPT: CRADLE OF CIVILIZATION — 12-c — Survevs the culture of ancient and examines its contributions to the development of Western civilization. Shows how the Egyptian wav of li'e evolved from a primitive tribal culture to an organized society under a single power-) ftil ruler. (Encyclopaedia Britanmcal). ’ HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND — 10-c — Presents Scotland whose terrain shows little change since the glacial period. Shows fishing, hunting, tending sheep, and harvesting grain. At a’Highland gathering prizes and trophies lure contestants from all over Scotland (AV-ED). JASCHA HEIFETZ — 26-b&w — The world’s most celebrated violin cvirtuoso relaxes in his home with his family. This film shows the beginning and progress of his meticulous practice routine in his studio on his violin. (Mills Picture Cornsh JOHNNY APPLESEEP (print No. 2) — 13-bbw — b The life of a man of neace who helped to make the world a better place for all living creatures by making a mission of planting apple seeds in the vast, newlv settled land of the Ohio Territory (Ohio, Indiana, Illinois). (Coronet). KOOTENAY LAKE HOLIDAY — 15-c-s — This film tour begins at the border-crossing town of Kinsgate. then follows Highway 99 to. Creston, described as a “scenic iewel in the crown of British Columbia.” Then, at Kootenav Bay the film pauses for a look at a famous local curiosity — the Bottle House, a cas-tle-like structure built entirely of "empties ” (Loaned by Canadian Travel Film Library.) MAJOR RELIGIONS OF T IT E WORLD — 20-b&w — This film presents an objective survey of the origins, rituals, and symbols of the major religions of the world today — namelv Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism. Christianity, and Mohammedanism. Designed tp inspire an appreciation for and tolerance of these religious faiths. (F n ovolnr>s»odia Britannica). meanwhile, back on FARTH — 14-bfcw — The Civil War past, the space-age future, and a year's activities on the humanitarian front are described. Scenes showing the launching of : cnaoe moketc and a reenactment of the Civil War’s babl« of Antietam and the work of Clara Bartan during the engagement drive home the point that human problems are .much the same now as a century a«o. (Loaned by Americarr'Red Cross). MONARCH: BUTTERFLY STORY — 11-c — Portrays four stages in the life cycle of a Mon-
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
Time Forcing Hand Os India’s Nehru
By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst Time, as it does to all men eventually, is forcing the hand of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. On Jan. 1, the 74-year-old Nehru received UPI correAbondapt Michael T. Malloy for the first and only interview he has granted in the new year. “I s uppose that I’ll retire some day,” Nehru said. „”But I have no plans for that now.” It was scarcely a week later, at his Congress party’s convention in Bhubaneswar, India, that an event occurred that is of vast concern to India and may change drastically Nehru’s own plans. At Bhubaneswar, Nehru suddenly fell ill. To an original diagnosis of high blood pressure, the doctors added references to a “weakness of the left limbs.” The general interpretation was that he had suffered a paralytic stroke. Now the word is that he has been urged to take a complete rest for at least three months. Strangers To Emerge New names, many of them strange to the West, will be emerging from an India which since independence in 1950 has been dominated by only one name—Nehru. Nehru inherited his mantle of leadership from the assassinated Mohandas Gandhi, and with it came also the mystic hero workship which enabled Nehru alone to dominate a nation of half a billion people, ranging from the primitive to the most sophisticated, divided by 845 different languages and major dialects. In India’s remotest areas there even are some who never have heard of Nehru. Nehru has dictated his country’s economic policies, a curious mixture of capitalism and state socialism. And he has dictated its foreign policy which still, despite Red China’s threat is based on non-alignment. Nehru’s strong personality has brooked no rivals for leadership and this is a matter of chief concern now. Even under t-Heavv Fire Loss At Spiceland Monday SPICELAND, Ind. <UPD — A Bantist Church, an adjoining paint and body shop and an upner apartment were destroyed Monday by fire whlAh at times threatened nearby houses. f Firemen from Spiceland and nearby New Castle said the blaze apparently started in the recently rem Mered church. Hv’re were no injuries and cause of the fire was not immediately determined, arch butterfly. (Encyclopedia Britannica). THE NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART — 10-b&w — A motion pic-( ture tour through the National Gaßerv of Art at Washington. The camera looks at the priceless namings of m°n like Rembrandt. Rubens. Renoir, Gainsborough, Romney, Reynolds, VanDvke and Whistler, and at sculptures and tapestries. (National Gallery of Art'. ' . - PEIPING FAMILY — 21-b&w The simple narrative of a mid-dle-class Chinese family in precommunist China. Shows the strue°les of an American-educat-ed Chinese teacher and his wife to provide for their large family and tp educate nrooerly the eldest daughter. (McGraw-Hill). SEVEN CITIES OF ANTARCTICA — 30-c — The story of the building of seven cities by the U. S. Naw on Antarctica in order to study this great region .five and one-half million sauare miles at the botton of our planet. (Walt Disnev)". SHAPESPEARE’S THF.ATRETHE GLOBE PLAYHOUSE — 18p& w _ A reconstruction of b the Globe Plavhouse is used to show how the stage may have been used for the production 'df Shakespeare’s plays. (University of California). SOUTH AMERICA (print No. 2) _ 27-c —- Julien Bryan’s study of the economic and social pattern and problems of South America. Georgraphical features, including the Andes, Amazon River area.; high plains, and Pampas, are shown. Indian cultures and present conditions are included. (International Film Foundation). UNIVERSE — 30-b&w — Explores the farthest reaches of the Universe, sensed and seen by science today, tietails of astronomical technique as well as an explanation of the, solor system and beyond are presented imaginatively and understandably. (Contemporary Films). * WILLIAMSBURG, THE STORY OF A PATRIOT — 30-c — A dramatic historical summary of the turbulent years between the imposition of the Stamp Act and the outbreak of the American Revolution. Filmed at Williamsburg and on several surrounding plantations. (Colonial Williamsburg, Inc).
Nehru’s strong hand, members of the Indian parliament, sharply divided between right and left, staged walkouts and noisy uproars accompanied by exchanges of mutual insults. Indian politics, rowdy before, now will became more so. Reach Compromise As a temporary measure, leaders of the Congress party's quarrelling right and left wings have reached a compromise by which they hope to run the government in Nehru’s absence. Neither is a name known to the west. • On the right is Tiruvallur Thattai Krishnamachari, an onagain, off-again cabinet minister since 1952 and now a sharp-tongued minister of finance. Nehru sent him to Washington last winter to «e---gotiate U.S. military aid. On the left is Home Minister Guzarilal Nanda. He is 65 and a fervent believer in planned economy. He has been associated with the government’s five year plans since 1951. Still more names will emerge before India’s power struggle is over. One powerful voice may be that of Nehru’s daughter, Mrs. Indira Gandhi. A possibility for the foreign ministry post is Nehru’s sister, Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit. Touted as a possible successor to Nehru is former Home Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri, a friend of Nehru, colorless but one of the few acceptable to both left and right. Robert Kennedy On Far East Mission - WASHINGTON fUPD— Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, one of his late brother’s most valued global troubleshooters, leaves for the Far East today on a similar mission for President Johnson. Kennedy wiH confer with Indonesian President Sukarno in Tokyo on Thursday about Indonesia’s dispute with the newly formed state of Malaysia. The attorney general was scheduled to meet with President Johnson at 10:30 a.m., EST today for a last-minute briefing on his trip. Sukarno’s threats against the Malaysian Federation have stirred increasing tensions in Southeast Asia, £nd ■ Johnson is under pressure from Congress to withdraw aid to Indoneia if Sukarno does not mend his way:?. The main purpose of Kennedy s mission apparently is to dissuade Sukarno' from hj s ar J; mouhced intention to crush Malaysia. Several weeks ago Johnson sent a special note to Sukarno expressing grave concern over the military buildup in the Malaysian crisis. Kennedy met with Sukarno once before, in February 1962, as President Kennedy’s personal emissary. The attorney general helped settle the Indonesians’ territorial dispute with the Dutch over West Irian, a part of the old Netherlands New Guinea, and has been highly regarded by the Indonesians since then. Cast Removed From Goldwater's Foot WASHINGTON <UPD — The cast was removed from Sen. Barry M. Goldwaters’s right foot Monday. The Arizona Republican underwent surgery for removal of a calcium spur just before Christmas.
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I A • IM ■ jUgF' * WM ! ■Hill' w- ‘ W l ' ~ ’■(fc 'S’*' li’ ■ ■'./I • ■' - t • • ■ ■ ■ • ■ YO HEAVE HO— An unidentified local motorist gets a little (?) helping hand in getting out of a parking space on Secdnd street Monday, as snow blanketed the city and county.—(Photo by Mac Lean) * I \ V ■ 11 ’ - ' ’ ' ■: — . .... vj., .ualiaA NORTH POLE UR DECATUR?— Roger Hawkins, left, and Byford Smith shovel a path to th? Culligan Water Softening office Monday morning. The snow had to be shoveled away before the dOors could be opened.—(Photo by Mac Lean) 4 .J K : . 7 WADING IN JANUARY— Jim Hake, Denny Sheets, and Pat We st, left to right, find the snow just a bit deep, and have a little wading session Monday afternoon.—(Photo by Mac Lean)
Here’s a list of American production cars with standard engines that deliver more horsepower per pound of car weight than the '64 Oldsmobile Holiday Coupe or Sports Coupe: , . ’ , '-.... ■ ~.-7- * ’ „ ' . . —T" . ■ .*• ■' _ - - - y J ■ '■ • ■ ■ ■' ■' (NONE) . ...... ...... ............... ._ ... .... .J,. —T'T"" . . • . .. ...... . — — ••... ■" "• •• \ ■?- ■ «>■, > . • :-. ' _ —t—' ■ : - > 'B4 OIOS mist >- IHfAEHOHIIS! !*» w . HOLIDAY COUPE I Aetion-pockwl Cotton V-B-ifondord on oH ttww MS Cotton putt out o tpiritod 290 horwtl Oivn the Cotton Holiday Coupo ot Spoilt Coupe moro hortepowor pot pound of eat wolpht than other ttandardongine M American production eort! And peicet Hart lower than evert Seo your Oldt Quality Dealer todoyl ' // ; ' / rOUi WC*l AUTrIMIZED U.DSMHILE MAUn OEAUI... KABOUAITEIt F«tHMEIT-BSAT. HMFK. SWf» M. WAMIC M, KTSTAI I. IfTSTU 11, MS ZINTSMASTER MOTORS, First and Monroe Slreols g_ run rm un KAia mini wa cm actin nnr fm a m sfuctin if late-mwi uufsafu ua uui ———r— —
TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1964
