Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 9 March 1964 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Russia Grooming Huge New Rocket

By ALVIN B. WEBB JR. United Press International HOUSTON <UPl>—The Soviet Union is grooming a giant, multi-stage rocket for a new space spectacular this month —

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possibly an orbital flight by two or more cosmonauts. The silvery rocket has been raised on a launching pad at Baikonur, a few miles eastnortheast of the Aral Sea in

Kazakhstan Province in the steppes of southern Russia. Baikonur is the site of the huge cosmodrome which has sent six Soviet cosmonauts into earth orbit in the past three years. Detect “Unusual Activity* Russia's last manned spaceflight, in the summer of 1963, sent cosmonaut Valery Bykovsky and the world’s first spacewoman, Valentina Tereshkova, on extended voyages through space. Informed sources said U.S. reconnaissance and surveillance systems have detected “unusul activity” in the Baikonur region. Meanwhile, Soviet tracking ships are reported steaming toward stations in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Russia has no counterpart of the worldwide tracking network that the United States has established to follow the course of its astronaut flgihts. Instead, the Soviets use highly instrumented ships to augment the string of stations that sketches generally northeastward across 'the broad chest of Russia. No Advance Word As usual, there has been no advance word from Moscow concerning the impending shot. But usually reliable U.S. sources said two distinct possibilities are: —Another "dual flight” by two cosmonauts in separate Vostok spaceships, and an attempt to link them into a small station in the sky. Such a linkup was believed to have been one of the goals of the Bykov-sky-Tereshkova voyage. If so, the attempt was ruined when Bykovsky’s Vostok-5 went into orbit slightly off course. —An attempt to send two or more cosmonauts aloft in the same spaceship. If a third spaceman were rocketed into orbit aboard a second Vostok, an attempt to bring the vessels together might be expected. Actress Decries Teen-Age 'Hurry' By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPD—If society is determined to put the label “teen-ager” on the young set, then why should there not also be “middle-ager” and "oldager”? • — Hayley Mills, the highly successful British actress who- fits — the teen billing, suggests the other categories for the other age brackets. “I don’t particularly dislike being called a teen-ager,” said the blue eyed beauty. “But in the minds of a lot of people, it’s become sort of a synonym for delinquency, hasn’t it? Something improper gets done and people say, ‘Oh, those teenagers again’ ”. Miss Mills proposed middleagers and old-agers during an interview, in which she decried the hurry, her own age group seems to be—the early marriages, the early drinking, the early smoking. ’ Youth Taken Rapidly “I just think,” she said, “we ought to leave something to look forward to. Mink coats and night clubs now. I think it’s a shame our childhood and youth are taken so rapidly.” Miss Mills wore a sheared goatskin

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

Conservative Partv —e Gaining In Britain

By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst When Winston Churchill led his party to victory in the British elections of October, 1951, it was the beginning of unbroken Conservative party rule extending to this moment. In elections generally predicted for June, under the new leadership of Sir Alec DouglasHome, the Conservatives will try for their fourth consecutive victory. And for the first time in many months, they are 'being given a chance to wip. Latest public opinion polls show the Labor party of Harold Wilson leading the Conservatives by 5.5 percentage points, a gain of 2.5 points for the Conservatives in a week. At the peak of the Profumo sex scandal within the government last fall, the polls showed Labor leading by a seemingly insurmountable 20 points. Credit Two Sources Credit for the apparent voter switch is being given to two sources. One is _ the current wave of prosperity which Britain is enjoying. The other is Douglas-Home whose selection to replace the ailing Harold Macmillan as British Prime Minister split the party in bitter debate which brought glee to the Labor itfes. Traditionally, the British voter has ignored the idiocyncracies of politicians and voted according to his pocketbook. Financially, he is feeling fine. Unemployment is down to less than 2 per cent and wages are at a record high. Industries are expanding and some are complaining of a shortage of skilled men, particularly in construction.

coat, not mink. It would be difficult for a 17-year-old girl who will be 18 in April to remain unsophisticated with the background Hayley Mills has. But in appearance very little, varnish has been added since she became a star. Her only makeup was a pale lipstick. Not a lock of shiny, shoulder-length hair was teased or glued into place with spray. Her conversation, which flowed freely, indicated a girl remarkably unspoiled by the success that since she was 12 has found her in seven motion pictures. She holds a dozen or more awards and citations for her acting including a special Oscar from Hollywood. “The Chalk Garden” Miss Mills has just finished “The Chalk Garden”, a Universal Pictures production, in which she stars aiith Deborah Kerr, Dame Edith Evans, and her father, John Mills, who accompanied her to New York where the picture will open first. Her mother is Mary Mayley Bell, the playwright and authoress, and there is one older married sister, Juliet, an actress now “knitting like crazy" for a baby she’s expecting in the spring, and a 14-year-oid brother, Jonathan.

Douglas-Home Surprises So headlong has been the rush of the British economy that the government, which last year cut taxes to spur it on, lately felt impelled to put on the brakes by raising the bank rate on borrowing. More of a surprise, especially to his detractors, has been Sir Alec Douglas-Home. When Harold Macmillan named him foreign minister in his government in July, 19<S0, the appointment was met by derision and ridicule. He was dubbed the “faceless earl.” He was an earl before stripping himself of all of his titles but one. But he proved himself a more than competent foreign minister. When Macmillan named him to succeed as head of the party and prime minister, the howls rose again. So deep was the split within the party that one writer, surveying possibilities of the coming election, described the Conservatives as displaying a “collective death wish.” Starts Making Impression The one man who seemed above the quarrel was DouglasHome himself. He toured the country side, travelled to Washington and exposed his engaging smile and thin-faced, bony features on television. The result, DouglasHome, the “faceless” one, was making his impression as prime minister. He also was emerging as a political in-fighter. To Harold Wilson’s claim that Labor could best lead the way to a renewal of science, education and industry, he replied by calling Wilson a “salesman of synthetic science.” Replying to Wilson’s demand that Britain “sweep away the grouse-moor conception of national ' leader ship,” he showed a sense of humor. Lt. N. W. Schroeder To Ft. George Meade KRF.ST.ER AFB, Miss. — Second Lieutenant Norbert W. Schroeder, son of Mrs. Ella Schroeder of R.R. 1, Decatur, Indiana., is being reassigned to Ft. George G. Meade, Mr., following his graduation from the United States Air Force electronic computer maintenance officer course here. Lieutenant Schroeder was trained to supervise maintenance of electronic computers. The course included college level instruction in the theory of electricity and electronics. The lieutenant, a graduate of Madison-Marion Consolidated high school, Hoagland Ind., has a B.S. degree from Purdue University. He received his commission in 1963 upon completion of officer training school. Paul Feller Is Named On Heidelberg List Paul Feller, son of the Rev. and Mrs. William C. Feller, of this city, and a freshman at Heidelberg College, ha.s been placed on the dean’s honor list at the college, according to the announcement of honor students by John A. Krout, acting dean.

Regional Scores Regional Tourneys At Columbus Columbus 83 Madison 41 Franklin 69 Clarksburg 67 Columbus 117 Franklin 70 At Connersville Rushville 57 North Dearborn 41 Brookville 73 Holton 54 Rushville 78 Brookville 60 At East Chicago Michigan City 106 Gary Froebel 87 . Gary Tolleston 84 East Chicago Washington 62 Gary Tolleston 93 Michigan City 83 At Elkhart Elkhart 71 Culver 39 South Bend Central 85 Columbia City 68 Elkhart 73 South Bend Central 65 At Evansville Evansville Rex Mundi 69 Tell City 66 Princeton 56 Boonville 54 Evansville Rex Mundi 85 Princeton 61 At Fort Wayne Garrett 76 Fort Wayne Central 72 Ashley 62 Adams Central 57 Garrett 62 Ashley 59 overtime At Greencastle Greencastle 82 Turkey Run 79 Crawfordsville 63 Williamsport 62 Greencastle 114 Crawfordsville 84 At Huntingburg Loogootee 49 Bloomfield 46 Springs Valley 72 North Knox 64 Springs Valley 84 Loogootee 69 At Indianapolis Anderson 75 Indianapolis Tech 65 Indianapolis Howe 75 Danville 49 Indianapolis Howe 68 Anderson 64 At Jeffersonville Seymour 67 Corydon 65 Needmore 75 Silver Creek 69 Seymour 87 Needmore 68 At Kokomo Lebanon 67 Manchester 63 Kokomo 68 Noblesville 66 Kokomo 71 Lebanon 51 At Lafayette Lafayette 91 Clinton Prairie 73 North White 63 Fowler 60 Lafayette 89 North White 75 At Logansport Pioneer 63 DeMotte 60 Valparaiso 74 North Judson 71 Valparaiso 64 Pioneer 62 ■ At Marion Huntington 68 Portland 54 Swayzee 65 Liberty Center 61 (9 overtimes) Huntington 58 Swayze 33' At New Castle Muncie South 62 New Castle 59 Richmond 79 Winchester 69 Muncie South 80 Richmond 79 At Terre Haute Terre Haute Garfield 90 Shakamak 88 Martinsville 69 Spencer 60 Martinsville 50 Terre Haute Garfield 44 NCAA Tourney Gels Underway This Evening By CURT BLOCK UPI Sports Writer It’s getaway day for the NCAA! The National Collegiate Athletic Associations’ 25-team post season extravaganza will be unveiled tonight in Philadelphia and Dallas, with the windup in Kansas City, March 21. A three-game program in the city of Brotherly Love sends Middle Atlantic champion Temple (17-7) against Yankee Conference winner Connecticut (1410)Ivy League titlist Princeton (19-7) faces VMI (12-11), upset winner in the Southern Conference; and Providence (20-5) meets Villanova (22-3), in a clash of two at-large seConference champion Texas A&M (18-6) vs. Texas Western (23-2). The survivor of the latter game meets Big Eight champion, Kansas State. The Oklahoma City - Creighton winlections. The three winners advance to join Duke, Atlantic Coast Conference victor, in the second round at Raleigh, N.C. this weekend. Tonight’s doubleheader in Dallas pits a pair of independents. Oklahoma City (15-10) vs. Freighton (21-5) and Southwest ner tackles Wichita, Missouri Valley Conference playoff winner, in the second round. Duke- entered the NCAA picture Saturday night by taking a convincing' 80-59 decision from Wake Forest in the finals of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. Michigan ends its regular season schedule tonight with a Big Ten game against Purdue, but the outcome is of little consequence. The Wolverines have already been tapped as the Big Ten representative in the NCAA playoffs. They recorded a 69-61 triumph over lowa Saturday night while Ohio State was being upset by Michigan State, 81-80. This assured Michigan of a least a tie for the title with Ohio State and since the Buckeyes were the last of the two to play in the NCAA (1962), Michigan gets the nod this time.

John Wooden Os UCLA Is Named Coach Os Year NEW YORK (UPD — John Wooden of UCLA today gave all the credit to his players following his selection as United Press International college basketball coach of the year. The choice of the 53-year-old grandfather in 'a nationwide poll of 293 sportswriters, editors and broadcasters was a natural as he led the top-ranked Bruins to their first unbeaten season in history. UCLA wound up its regular campaign with a 26-0 record and is favored to go on to capture the NCAA championship starting this week. Wooden, who started his coaching career in 1932 and never has suffered through a losing season, knows where the credit for his success belongs. “This certainly is a wonderful honor and naturally I am quite pleased,”’ he said when informed of. his selection. “I think any coach selected should be

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MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1964

tremendously proud. But it is the boys who play for him who get the coach in the position to receive such an honor. And I have been fortunate in having a fine group to coach. “The boys deserve all the credit' for the success they enjoyed this year. They did the job and showed the determination on the court necessary for victory.” Wooden received 106 votes in the balloting, more than double the 47 awarded runnerup Adolph Rupp of Kentucky. Other coaches who received strong support were Lefty Driesell of Davidson with 23 votes and Dave Strack of Michigan with 22. Fred Taylor of Ohio State, who won coach of the year honors in 1961 and 1962, was fifth this year with 13 votes. Ed Jucker of Cincinnati won last year. Wooden came to UCLA m 1949 after 11 years learning his trade in the high school ranks. In his 16 seasons at the Los Angeles college, Wooden’s teams have compiled a record of 310 victories against 125 losses. The Bruins- won three Pacific Coast Conference championships under his direction, two Pacific Coast Southern Division crowns and now three straight Big Six titles.