Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 72, Decatur, Adams County, 25 March 1964 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Most Legislators > Seeking New Terms

Br BOYD GILL United Frew International INDIAN APOUS (UPD — The overwhelmingly majority of members of the 1963 Indiana General Assembly aspire to return to the legislative halls next January. On the eve of the deadline for filing for the May 5 legislative primaries, 71 of the 99 present members of the House are officially declared candidates for renomination to their old seats ior advancement to the Senate. • And 14 of the 25 Senate memi 16 From Decatur At I. U. Center Sixteen people from Decatur .■ are among the students enrolled in credit classes this semester at the Indiana University Fort Wayne campus. A total of 1001 students are enrolled from 63 Indiana cities, 73 from 62 Ohio communities, and two from Michigan cities. The Fort Wayne campus’ over- ,, . all enrollment of both full and part time students for the spring semester shows an increase of 12 per cent over the enrollment for the same semester last year, according to Dr. Ralph E. Broyles, director. Full time students increased 25 per cent Hie summer session of the Fort Wayne campus of Indiana University will open June 22 and run through Aug. 14. Interested people should contact the office of the regional campus for a copy of the schedule of classes. The fallowing people from Decatur are enrolled in the I. U. Fort Wayne campus this semester: ; --- • Russell Augsburger, Gerald ' Baumann, Frederick Kauffman, Rudolph Kleinknight, Dianna Linn, Mickey McColly, Donald ’ Macke, Larry Macklin, Ethelind Mann, Phyllis Anne Penrod, Mar- . jorie Rentz, Norbert Selking, Robert Weber, Robert Wechter, Edward Wolfe, and Elizabeth Zerkel. ’

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bers whose four-year terms expire this year already are officially erftered in the quest tor new four-year terms. This leaves only 28 House members and 11 Senate members who are undeclared. Some of the holdouts may not yet have decided, although the hour is late, whether they wish to take a chance on spending 101 days, instead of 61, in session in 1965 to duplicate the 1963 situation. But others have valid reasons. Sens. D. Russell Bontrager, R.Elkhart, and MarshaU F. Kizer, D - Plymouth, set their sights on bigger game. Bontrager is a candidate for the GOP nomination for U. S. senator, and Kizer is one of seven Democrats seeking the gubernatorial nomination. In the House, Rep. Robert Rock, D-Anderson, is another of the Democratic ' gubernatorial candidates. Rep. Lawrjn P. Dagley, D-Clinton, is running for the congressional nomination’’in the 6th District. Tbpmost leader who is yet undeclared is 1963 House Speaker Richard W. Guthrie, Indianapolis Republican. Among the 35 legislators who have not announced for renomination or higher offices, 6 House members and 3 Senator members are from Marion County. That leaves only 26 lawmakers eligible to run again from all the other 91 counties of the state. The list of those who haven’t filed is much smaller than the one of those who have. Senators who had not filed up to noon Tuesday include Walter Baran, D-East Chicago: Paul Bilby, R-Warsaw; Kenneth Brown, R-Muncie; Paul Hatfield, D - Evansville: Charles Kellum, R - Mooresville: Keith McCmormick, R - Lebanon; C. Wendell Martin, John C. Ruckelshaus and Robert Lee Brokenburr, Indianapolis Republicans. The House members who had not filed were Reps. Austin Barker, D-Attica: Otto Bonahoom, R-Fort Wayne; Leland Callaway, D - Michigan City; Leewell Carpenter, R- Wabash; Joseph Cloud, R - Richmond; Ralph tf«nn, D - Kokomo, and Richard -Good. R-Kokomo; William Hardwick, R-Martinsville; Frederick M. Hinshaw, D-Mun-cie; John Kirkpatrick, D-Fort-ville; Ben Lesniak, Jr., D- East Chicago; Paul B. Myers, RBioomingdale; Orville Phillips, D-Rising Sun; Otto Pozgay, DSouth Bend; Ralph Rader, RAkron; Spencer Schnaitter, DMadison; Lowell H. Smith, RNew Castle; James V. Stagg, D-Evansville; John Stanczak, DBicknell; Georgp Taylor, DPrinceton; and L. Keith Bulen, David B. Caldwell, James C. Clark, Rexford Early, Guthrie, Edward Madinger, all Indianapolis Republicans.

Zion United Plans Holy Week Service The annual candlelight communion service will be held in the Zion United Church of Christ, Third and Jackson streets. Good Friday at 7:30 p. m. The meditation for the service will be given by the pastor, the Rev. William C. Feller, on the theme: “The Solemn Spectacle.” The senior choir, under the direction of Roger’ Spencer, will sing, “Go To Dark Gethsemane” by Noble. Mrs. J. Fred Fruchte, organist, will play, “O Sacred Head, Once Wounded" by Johann Kuhnan for a prelude, and “A Lamb Bears All Its Guilt Away” by J. S. Bach for a postlude. Good Friday afternoon the congregation will join with the other Decatur churches in the union three-hour service which will be held in the First Methodist church. Local ministers will bring the messages on “The Seven Last Words from the Cross.” Easter Sunday services will begin with the union sunrise services at • a. m. in the Church of God, with young people from the cooperating churches participating in the service. A breakfast for ‘the young people of Zion church will be held in the church dining room at 7J5 a. m. Members of the confirmation class will be guests. Church school sessions will begin at 9 a. m. and all families are invited to be present. The junior department will present special numbers. The festival service of worship will begin in 10 a. m with the prelude: “In Death’s Strong Grasp the Savior Lay” by J. S. Bach, with Mrs. Fruchte at the organ. The choir and confirmation class will join. in the processional. The choir anthem will be “Open the Gates of the Temple” by Knapp- offertory wiH be, “Easter Dawn” by Aloys Claussmann, and the postlude will be “Christ Is • Now Rysen Agayne” by Heinrich Bach. The pastor will base his Easter message on the theme: The Empty Tomb.” New members will be received and the Lord s Supper will again *e celebrated, and the 11 members of the confirmation class win receive the communion for the first time. All members of the church are urged to be present in all the services. Lenten self-denial coin cards are to be presented. Visitors are also invited. , Two Are Arrested On Traffic Charges Raymond Virgil Cook, 19-year-old resident of route 5, Decatur, has been cited into justice of the peace court, following his arrest by the city police Tuesday evening. Cook was charged with reckless driving on 13th street at 9 o’clock Tuesday evening on 13th street, and is to appear in J. Pcourt April 7 to answer to the charge. Delmar Charles Fitch, 90-year-old resident of Fort Wayne, was arrested at 6:30 p.m. Monday for disregarding a stop sign at the intersection of Fifth and Second streets. He was'cited into J. Pcourt March 30.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

TH H TOM Siu,,. //• • CONSTRUCTION UNDERWAY—Above is the scene on the southwest corner of Monroe and Second streets, as the former Boston Store is in the process of being remodeled for an addition to the Holthouse Drug Co. store.—<Photo by Cole)

Refuses To Certify Salinger Candidacy SAN FRANCISCO (UPD — Pierre Salinger’s campaign for the U.S. Senate entered a critical phase today with the California Supreme Court debating whether his name should appear on the- June primary ballot. An attorney for the former White House press secretary petitioned the state’s highest court for a writ of mandate Tuesday after Secretary of State Frank M. Jordan refused to certify Salinger’s candidacy. Jordan had rejected Salinger’s nomination papers as “incomplete ’fl Salinger implied that Jordan, the only Republican holding statewide office, acted out of partisan motives. “I just wonder if it isn’t because of the Republican feeling that I would be the most difficult candidate to defeat in November,” said the San Francisco - born former White House aide. Salinger’s attorney, Alvin H. Goldstein, asked the Supreme Court to compel Jordan to place Salinger’s name on the Democratic primary ballot. There was no immediate indication of how quickly the Supreme Court would act, but Salinger forces were working against an April 9 deadline when Jordan must announce the certified list of candidates to county clerks throughout the state. The legal questions hanging over Salinger’s candidacy center on the fact that he is a registered voter in Virginia. Salinger contends that he meets the legal requirements to run for office in California.

"T f ITT I*l ft -ftlfl 0 I | ill ft Wx-j vSJi li -'ll 11 yjft ft ft '" * RICHARD ELLSASSER, one of the nation’s top recording organists, will present the next concert of the Adams County Civic Music Association, which will be held at the Decatur Youth and Community Center at 8 o'clock next Tuesday evening. March 31. ; Ellsasser. known as “the Paganini of the concert organ.” was born in Cleveland. 0., in 1926. His father was head of-a conservatory of music and a member of the Cleveland Symphony. The artist made his first public appearance at the age of seven when he began a tour of the eastern states, appearing with some of the nation's leading symphonies. At nine, he joined the boys' choir at Trinity Cathedral in Cleveland and became interested in the organ. In less'than a year he was giving organ recitals in the east, playing programs of all-Bach. His concert appearances now average 100 yearly. His audiences yearly have exceeded 200.000, excluding countless numbers who enjoy him on television, radio and on RCA Victor Red Seal, MGM ■- and Pan-American Records. He served as minister of music at the Wilshire Methodist church ,of Los Angeles, where he created and directed the first seven music festivals of that ‘ church. He resigned in 1953' to devote himself exclusively to concertizing, recording, conducting 1 and composing. «->

First Aid Course To Open Tuesday A new Red Cross first aid course starts Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the I & M building, Mrs. Francis Howard, instructor, announced today. The 10-hour standard course will be taught in weekly segments. The only cost for the course is the price of the first aid handbook, which will then belong to the individual, and be available for reference in the future. Pledge Aid To Hike Standard Os Living GENEVA (UPD — President Johnson today pledged the United States to “strongest cooperation” in the worldwide effort to raise the standard of living in the poorer countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America. The President made the pledge in a message to the United Nations conference on trade and development. It was presented by Undersecretary of State George Ball, chief of the U.S. delegation. Ball said in a policy speech to the conference that all industrial nations should help to advance the underdeveloped countries, but he warned there is no easy or ready-made solution. Johnson threw full U.S. support behind the campaign. “The great task of our time is to bring the fruits of economic well-being to all peoples in a world of peace and freedom,” he said. “On behalf of the people and the government of the United States of America. I hereby pledge our strongest cooperation in this great joint endeavor.”

Political Therapy Os LBJ Effective

By LYLE C. WILSON United Pres® International “The Treatment” is the description given by President Johnson’s friends and foes to the political therapy by which LBJ persuades reluctant citizens to vote for or otherwise to endorse the administration's projects. “The Treatment" varies from the gentle laying on of hands to muscular arm twisting calculated to wrest that member from its socket. The gentle laying on of hands includes such as a White House lunch or a birthday telephone call. Lunch at the White House may be accompanied by a dip in the presidential pool. If no birthday or other fete offers, the treatment may be via telephone call expressing the President’s flattering desire for advice, help and counsel. The arm twisting is reserved mostly for members of Congress whose votes are required. There is, in fact, not much difference between Johnson’s bare knuckle handling of a recalcitrant congressman and the bully boy methods which were employed by the late President John F. Kennedy. A major difference, of course, is that Johnson’s methods get results. Chuckle Over Treatment For the non-member of Congress the Johnson treatment is likely to be all sweetness and light: no arm twisting whatever or, at least, none that the patient immediately can detect. Thus it is that the politically minded in Washington are chuckling over the reported effect of the Johnson treatment on Joseph L. Rauh Jr., the Washington, DC., spokesman for ADA. ADA is Americans for Democratic Action, a leftwing sodality denounced by its enemies as a menace to the republic but conceded by all to be an effective political force with style. The right-wing National Review noted Rauh’s treatment in a recent issue as follows: “The whirlwind courtship of ADA panjandrum Joseph L. Rauh Jr. by Lyndon Johnson has started to pay big dividends. Johnson offered Rauh a seat on the presidential airplane to New York for Herbert Lehman’s funeral just a few days after his inauguration. Since then he has asked Rauh repeatedly to the White House and listened to him and his conferes on civil rights. Result: The ADA which four years ago pointedly endorsed only the top half of the Ken-nedy-Johnson ticket is now telling the boys it’s okay to go all the way with LBJ.” Switch In Tactics That would be a switch. On June 30, 1960, when LBJ was seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, ADA said of him: “He (LBJ) is a conservative, anti-civil rights, gas-and-oil senator. He has supported all of the major antilabor legislation enacted during the past two decades and bragged about it.” As late as February, last year, Rauh said: “Vice President Lyndon Johnson has dem-

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onstrated once again that his first loyalty is to the southern racists.” Whether Rauh has forgiven LBJ and has persuaded ADA to do likewise perhaps remains to be proven, but it is a fact that ADA’s anti, - Johnson barrage has been silenced. It is a fact, also, that many persons were astonished by Johnson’s vigorous endorsement of civil rights and his demand for House action. That could be the secret of Rauh's conversion. But still warranted is a chuckle on the chance that old-pro Rauh may have been snared by the Texas treatment.

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