Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 101, Decatur, Adams County, 28 April 1964 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
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FLAGS FLY as the Boy Scouts, Cub Scouts, and Explorer Scouts of the more than 50 troops, packs, and posts in Adams. Wells, and Jay counties, march through Decatur Saturday as they presented their first Limberlost district ScouVO-Rama. Above are flags from many of the participating units. — (Photo by Cole)
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ENTRANCE DISPLAY at Limberiost Scout-O-Rama Saturday is provided by Troop 66, of Decatur. — (Photo by Colei
Torrid Charges Are Hurled At Wallace
INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Alabama Gov. George Wallace flies back to Indiana tonight to face a hail of torrid charges leveled; at him in his presidential primary campaign by Governor Welsh and church Dad . Wallace’s appearances last week in—the state. —a' ::g —with paid television, radio and newspaper advertising, touched off the strongest verbal attacks ever heard uttered by Welsh against a political opponent. The Indiana”" governor Ts"~Sp-‘ posing the southern segregationist to preserve the state's Democratic nominating votes for President Johnson and indications are he has his back "against The Alabaman had another full week of Hoosier campaigning lined up, beginning Wednes--nesday morning in Indianapolis with a meeting of the Eastern Star. That evening he was to appear at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend. Roger Schnepf Quits Hartford City Post Roger Schnepf, a graduate of Decatur high school, and son of Mrs. William Schnepf of this city, has resigned as principal of the Hartford City high school effective at the close of the present school term. He resigned to accept a position as executive vice principal at Morten high school in Richmond. He has been at Hartford City for the past year.
ROBERT E. LANE HI Candidate ■ for Adams County AUDITOR Democratic Primary Election Tuesday, May 5 YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED Pol. Advt. i ■
“The Alabama Highway Patrol has spent $1.5 million dollars for plainclothesmen, wiretappers and a state network of informers who keep the opposition in line,’’ Welsh said Monday night. “That network of political rp t... ; file on everybody who • . : ees with the governor,” Welsh added. 'Those who continue to disagree must live in fear of economic boycott and physical harm.” The .. Hoosierchief. _ executive made his charges against Wallace at a meeting of St. Joseph County Democrats. Indiana church leaders came to Wei ’ aid over the weekend' ..with ' : y ch I. a-ked port the segregationist Alabama governor and similar messages were planned for next Sunday as the May 5 primary grows near. “Wallace's attack on civil rights is a moral issue, not a political issue.” Dr. Grover Hartman, executive secretary of ' the Indiana Council of Churches, explained. Civil Rights Issue Welsh also lashed Wailace in a civil rights statement. “Alabama, is getting about $230 million a year .from the federal government which is about 214 dollars for every dollar the state pays in federal taxes. Then the Alabama legislature gave SSO thousand to a. socalled commission that is deliberately misrepresenting the federal civil rights bill,” Welsh
said. Alabama is helping pay for its governor’s campaign in Indiana against President Johnson.” Welsh noted that, “such staunch conservatives as House Minority Leader Charles Halleck, R-Ind., voted for the civil rights bill. .. Reps. Ralph Harvey and Richard Roudebush voted for it... Rep. Donald Bruce, who is widely known for his extremely conservative
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDM NA
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HULA DANCE by Cub Scout Jon Doan, is watched above at the Lincoln PTA Cub pack 3061 circus at the Saturday Scqut-O-Rama. — (Photo by Cole)
viewpoint” voted for it. “They knew this bill would not destroy your right to sell or rent your home to whom you please. They knew that the bill would not cost you your job or interfere with your union seniority rights. They knew that this bill would not force children to attend schools outside their neighborhood,” Welsh said. Much of Welsh’s civil rights statement was in rebuttal to advertisements in newspaper and broadcast media which Wallace has made full use of in the state. Hartman urged Indiana church people to remember that “Brother Wallace is not a champion of state’s rights as we understand state’s, rights, but he wants to perpetuate state’s wrongs . ..” Hatcher Jones Criticism Indiana 'civil rights director Harold Hatcher also joined in the criticism of Wallace Monday. He sajd the Alabaman was only half right when he said the civil rights legislation pending in Congress would take away a state’s right to handle its own civil rights matters. Hatcher explained the bill now before the . Senate “states in no uncertain terms in four different sections that the federal government cannot intervene in states like Indiana who have civil rights commissions of their own with powers- ter force their own state laws.” He said half of the 50 states have such commissions. Wallace’s plans include a trip Thursday morning to Washington to testify -before- the House Judiciary Committee on the proposed constitutional amendment guaranteeing religious observances in schools andother public institutions. Thursday night he was scheduled for an appearance at Valparaiso although city fathers made it clear he was not particularly welcome. Mayor Donald Will said “It is his right to speak here if he wants to. I am not trying to prevent him.” A Wallace aide said- the governor had rented a building in the city for an address.
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