Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 36, Decatur, Adams County, 12 February 1964 — Page 12
PAGE FOUR-A
President Os Cyprus Controversy Center
By PHIL NEWSOM CPI FmMkh Newa Analyst When the British withdrew from Suez, they were left only with Cyprus as an Eastern Mediterranean base from which to move either toward the middle Eastern oil fields or to protect the eastern flank of NATO. Thus, the British air and
Directory Planned For Handicapped
By HOBTENSE MYERS United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (U PI) — Some myysterious goings - on about the Hoosier capital were clarified today with an ans nouncement by Mrs. Mack H.» McCormick, Indianapolis, chairman of a group called Navigation Unlimited. Volunteers under her direction have been measuring the width of doors, drawing diagrams of entrances and exits, and doing other puzzling actions in and around restaurants, hotels, motels, churches, the Statehouse, State Office Building, CityCounty Building, World War Memorial, and other public places. Mrs. McCmormick explained that the measuring and diagramming is in preparation for a directory to be issued in a few months for the aid of persons with navigation problems, such as those in wheel chairs, on crutches or other physical impairments. The project is sponsored by the Marion County Muscular Dystrophy Foundation, and will MAN to MAN “What do I get out of enlistment in the Army?” —Just Asking Every man who enlists in the Army can be sure of getting two pretty important things. Yeu’ll get Army training, which includes advanced technical knowledge and valuable leadership experience—both of which can mean a lot in your later career. The other thing the Army gives you is the chance to serve your country. The technical training that builds your future protects America’s future too. And the same goes for the leadership training. The Army will teach you to depend on yourself, because America depends on ~ you. There are a lot of different ways to do something for your country. That’s one reason the Army offers you the privilege of choosing your own job training before you enlist. Os course you have to qualify to make sure you have the aptitude required for the training you pick. And when you qualify, you get a guarantee that you’ll get the training you want. —Your Army Recruiter SFC Francis L. Funk U.S. Army Recruiter Room 305, Federal Bldg. Fort Wayne Ph. 742-7439
I K'fl J H ■ I ■ j iI I 'i A 3 I II (tawing problem for millions of women is what to do with tirnir nails. First, don’t bite them. Second, cut and file to •lattoK teo »d tatftlk
army bases on Cyprus took on a position of inajor importance in NATO strategic planning, along with the US. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean and the defensive forces of Greece and Turkey. In Cyprus’s current internal difficulties, the British bear a further responsibility inasmuch as prior to Cypriot independ-
put Indianapolis in a class with other big cities which have such directories. Mrs. McCormick said the Cincinnati Junior League had sent her a complete itemization of its planning in producing such a directory. “We also have studied directories already in use in New York City, Boston and Lansing, Mich.,” she explained. “We are receiving enthusiastic help from management in getting permission to measure and fill in our questionnaires,” Mrs. McCormick said. “But right now we need more volunteers.” The directory, when completed, will not make any recommendations about the accessibility of any public place but will give exact details about steps, or lack of them, width of entrance doorways and also of inside doors, including toilets. Whether or not there are elevators, adjacent parking lots and other data also will be included. Mrs. McCormick said that in many public places there are entrances and exits intended far freight which a wheel-chair rider might use when steps prevent going in the front entrance. ——— : ——-— “Few people who have normal walking power realize what a problem is faced by the person in a wheel-chair or on crutches,” Mrs. McCormick said. A trip to pay taxes, register as a voter, attend a meeting, borrow a library book and many other frequent errands are big problems because of steps or narrow doors. “A trip to the post office to mail a letter can be a difficult thing,” she. added. Little known information, such as the wheel-chair entrance to the many-stepped World War Memorial, or the special telephone number that wil open la door for handicaps at the State Office Buiding will be included in the directory. Armed with the compiled inforatmion, persons with physical handicaps may find doors opened to them they never knew existed. P T~ —0 Modern Etiquette | By Roberta Lee o— o Q. I have instructed my 14-year-old son to remain at the dinner table when we have guests, until everyone has finished eating, but he insists on leaving. What is proper? A. You do some insisting, too. Tell him that, in all politeness, he must remain at the table until tthe end of the meal—unless the adults linger to talk and smoke. Then he may ask to be excused. Q. Would it be proper for a young man to invite two young women friends to make use of the spare bedroom in his apartment while they are in town? A. The offer is perfectly proper — but to avoid any possible tongue-wagging, he should move out while they are there.
ence in 1960, the island for 82 years had been under British rule. The United States is drawn into it as the leading power of NATO. As in the years preceding Cypriot independence the central figure of tfce controversy is the bearded Greek Orthodox Archbishop Makarios who became the first president of Cyprus. Generates Own Trouble Given an island sharply divided between a Turkish Moslem
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
minority and a Greek Orthodox population in four-to-one majority, plus a constitution which from the beginning was unworkable, Makarios nonetheless has succeeded in generating much of his own trouble. The constitution worked out by British, Greek, Turkish and Cypriot representatives gave both the Greek majority and the Turkish minority the right of veto over such matters as taxes, defense and foreign policy and almost was a guarantee that government soon would
fall into a state of paralysis,. which it did. Makarios quite rightly declared that the constitution needed some changes, but he inflamed the Turkish minority by moving to remove their veto and to abolish divided Turkish and Greek municipalities. He further complicated the situation by declaring that enosis (union with Greece) was not dead, clearly indicating that he would revive the traditional ambition of Greek Orthodox leaders as quickly as he thought he
could. Cypriots, never averse to violence, brought out their guns and the shooting started. Won’t Stand By Greece, anxious that there should be no split within NATO, has preferred to remain as aloof as possible from the dispute. The Turks have warned that they will not stand by and see Turkish Cypriots slaughtered. This is the maelstrom into which the United States now has been drawn.
Contingent upon approval of Makarios, the U. S. has agreed to join other NATO nations in supplying troops to police the peace in Cyprus pending arbitration. Makarios has agreed in principle but on the condition that the peace force should be answerable to the United Nations Security Council wherein the the Soviet Union possesses a veto —a condition unacceptable either to the United States or Britain. Russia also has dipped in its
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1964
oar, siding with the Greek ma. jority and Makarios, presumably because the strong Cypriot Communist party is confined to the Greek community. U. S. and British hopes are based on a belief that Makarios can afford neither to permit the. situation to drift into all-out | civil war not into partition, both of which at the moment seem imminent possibilities. Meanwhile, Makarios pfobably has lost forever what Ijttle faith the Turkish minority had in him.
