Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 107, Decatur, Adams County, 5 May 1964 — Page 2
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EVANGELIST—The Rev Chester D. will conduct evangelistic services at the Wren Church of the N azarene one and one-half miles south of Wren, at 7:30 p. m. daily, beginning Wednesday and continuing through May 17. Special music will be presented by local talent. The pastor, the Rev. Joseph Dotson, invites the public to atteßd.
Jerry Franz Ranks Seventh In Class Jerry L. Franz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle D. Franz, of Monroe, was honored as seventh-ranking junior during recongition day Tuesday at Ohio Northern University, Ada. O. Franz earned an average of 3.753 on a 4.0 basis, 4-0 being a straight A average. Franz was also named to membership in Phi Alpha Kappa, liberal arts college honorary. The highest ranking student at the university was Miss Cindy Fusco, of Lyndhurst, 0., who had a 3.931.
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Minor Candidates Differ In Views INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — The five minor candidates in today's Indiana presidential primaries, including the first woman ever to file in this contest, represent viewpoints not espoused by the major candidates. The views of the lone woman —Mrs. Fay T. Carpenter Swain, Cincinnati—are difficult to categorize. But those of the four men are clear, although they have gained little attention in the heat of the political wars between Democratic Govs. Matthew Welsh and George Wallace and Republican Sen. Barry Goldwater and ex-Gov Harold Stassen. Mrs. Swain, a former Hoosier, has attracted more attention for wearing a wrist watch on her ankle and bussing potential voters, but one she set down her views: “Science, art, life, all against capital punish law. . .that rope, gas. green electric chair. . .unfair, unsafe, unsanitary. . .legal murder is legal murder is murder. . .Monroe Doctrine dead. .. civil rights political football. . . emergency free food. . .free color television.” Lar Daly, Chicago furniture jobber, whose literature arrived at Welsh’s office showing “Vote Republican” crossed out and “Vote Democrat” written in by pencil, advocates the immediate destruction of Communist China and Cuba by military force. Rockville’s John Hugh Latham, retired pipeline worker, advocates “segregation of the black and white races” and “printing enough money to pay all of the debts of the United States.” Mrs. Swain, Daly and Latham are on the Democratic presidential preference ballot. On the Republican ballot, the two minor presidential candidates, Joseph G. Ettl, South Bend, and Frank Beckwith, Indianapolis, represent serious efforts to offer GOP voters a choice in view T point in between Goldwater and Stassen. Both men are attorneys. - o Ettl explained that many Republicans “like myself are consierably less than satisfied with the choices available for our consideration and are concerned as to the possible result of a surrender by default of the first ballot support of our Indiana delegation.” “The viewpoints of most of the rank and file of the people of our state do not coincide with those of the announced candidates,” Ettl declared. Beckwith, a former presidential candidate who regards his entry as an aid to his Negro race, also is a middle-roader in view although he advocates federal supervision of presidential and congressional elections.
ie6 (This is a,new service to new parents — one-column photos of new babies born at the Adams county memorial hospital will be printed in the Decaturw Daily Democrat, if the parents sign a release at the hospital at the time the picture is taken, or bring in a one-column picture and sign a release at the Decatur Daily Democrat.)
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JEFFERY JAMES HAWKINS is the name of the eight pound, nine ounce son of James an 4 Helen J. Hileman Hawkins, of Oakhurst Trailer Court, route 3, born at the Adams county memorial hospital at 5:46 a. m. April 29, 1964.—(Ph0t0 by Cole) Reports Plot On Bob Kennedy Life NEW YORK (UPD—An alleged plot to assassinate Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy was uncovered by the Justice Department in 1962. a national magazine said Monday. Look magazine, in a copyrighted article by its Washington correspondent, Clark Mollenhoff, said a top Teamsters official, Edward G. Partin, informed the government about the alleged plot. Partin was the top prosecution witness who aided the government in getting Teamsters President James R- Hoffa convicted recently of jury tampering. The article said the Justice Department learned of the alleged plot in September. 1962. It said Partin, a Baton Rouge, La., Teamsters boss, informed on the alleged plotters because the thought of assassination was “too much for him.” The magazine said Partin swore he was asked to help obtain plastic explosives by a top Teamsters official while he was visiting international union headquarters in Washington. He saki the explosives were to be used to kill Kennedy.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Club Schedule TeteplMM 3-Zl2l Mn. Ctmnte Mitchel Society Editor Calendar items for each day’s pnblication most be phoned tn by 11 a.m. (Saturday 9:30) TUESDAY Pocahontas lodge, Red Men hall, 7:30 p.m. C. L. of C., C. L. of C. hall, potluck dinner, 6:30 p.m. 39’ers, carry-in dinner, Community Center, 6:30 p.m. Happy Homemakers home demnostration club, Mrs. John Baltzell, 7:30 p.m. Dutiful Daughters Sunday School class, Bethany church basement, 7:30 p.m. Beta Sigma Phi city council, Mrs. Harold Gray, 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY Calavary EUB mother-daughter banquet. Palmer House, Berne, 6:30 p.m. Women’s Guild mother-daugh-ter carry-in dinner, Zion United Church of Christ, 6:15 p.m. Welcome Wagon club, Four Seasons restaurant, 6:30 p.m. St. Gerard study club, Mrs. Richard Des Jean, 8 p.m. THURSDAY St. Joseph’s Study Club, Mrs. Dave Baker, 8:15 p.m. ONO home demonstration club tour, meet Lister’s grocery at 8 a.m. Dorcas circle of Decatur EUB church, Mrs. James Staley, 7:30 p.m. Colleen Linn and Jane Booth; 6-9, Colleen Linn and Jane Both; 6-9, Rosemary Gase and Ann Thorn. Gals & Pals square dance club, Decatur Youth and Community Center, Carl Geels, caller. Rainbow girls. Masonic hall. 6:45 p.m. Ruth Circle, Decatur EUB church, Mrs. WiHiam Dellinger, 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY Rumage sale. First Christian church basement, 6 to 9 p.m. Pleasant Mills Baptist church family night, McCoy Center, 6:30 p.m. Rummage sale by St. John’s Ladies aid (Flatrock), McConnell bldg?, 9 a.m. SATURDAY Rummage sale, First Christian church basement, 10 a.m. to- 4 p.m. American Legion auxiliary, Legion home, business, 8 p.m. Psi lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Alvera Eady and Gwen Doan; 6-9, Henrietta Snively and Barbara Arnold. Monmouth Soring Concert. Monmouth high school. 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY Psi. lota Xi Trading Post, 1-4, Jeanne Knape and Mickey iyStory hour, Decatur public library, Ages 5 to 7, 1:30 p.m. Pleasant Mills MYF bake sale, church lawn, 9 a.m. - 12 noon. Rummage sale by St. John’s Ladies aid (Flatrock), McConnell bldg., 9 am, MONDAY IHCA, Mrs. John Brecht, 1027 Parkview drive. 7:30 p.m. " Pythian Sisters Needle club, after Temple, 7:30 p.m. Moose home. Gals and Pals home demonstration clubs Pleasant Mills school, 7:30 p.m. Merrier Mondays home demonstration club. Magley school, for-, eign food carry in dinner, 6:3Q p.m. Geneva Lady's Sister Is Taken By Death Mrs. Eva Arvada Robinson. 88. of Hartford City, died Monday at the Blackford county hospital after a long illness. She was the widow of Charles A. Robinson. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Grover Shanks of Geneva, and Mrs. Lorenzo Jacobs of Bluffton: four grandchildren and 14 greatgrandchildren. Funeral rites were held this afternoon at the Keplinger funeral home in Hartford City, with burial in the IOOF cemetery in that city.
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Final Civic Music Concert Presented
Edward E. Liechty A magic carpet of melody waa the method of tranrpirtation by which a large audieacS from Decatur and surrounding communities took a trip around the world Monday evening at the Decatur Community Center, when the Karlsrud Chorale presented the final concert of the current Adams County Civic Music Association series. Concert - goers were treated to a distinctive program featuring great master*pieces for male chorus, in addition to numerous special arrangements for the chorale made by Charles Touchette- And, when the last of the encores was heard, the audience had been carried around the world with songs from Russia, Israel, Norway, France and Italy along with operatic scenes, folk songs and spirituals. It was one of the season’s most interesting and enjoyable concerts with the entire production created by Edmund Karlsrud bass-baritone who sang the aris and recitatives for the Messiah oratorio when it was presented last December by the Berne Mennonite choral society, As' intimated, various factors contributed towards making the program unusually gratifying and attractive. In the first place, there was Mr. Karlsrud, a young man with an easy personality and a voice of depth and polish which has been compared to a sapphire. In the second place, all of the fourteen men of the chorale are solo artists in their own right and have gained wide recognition in the music worldThen, too, the program offered many exquisitely beautiful compositions which invariably delight those who know the values of compositions written by the great classical and romantic masters. Wide Range The music ranged from the two Hebrew chants in Part I to such such composers as Rachmaninoff. Dunajewsky, Helfman, Mozart. Schuman, Rossini, Grieg, as “Joshua Fit De Battle Ob Jericho” in part VI and included Mussorsky, Beethoven, Donizetti, Puccirji, Bizet, and Sigmund Romberg. Norman Johnson, director-ac-companist, who has toured with such artists as Rise Stevens and currently is assistant director of the Oratorio society of New York, was another big reason for the entertaining and musically satisfying concert. To your reviewer, the highest mission of music is to portray feelings and emotions and to draw out these same “affections” from the hearers. This was so greatly achieved by the Karlsrud Chorale. Again, a song can be called a work of art only when the balance between music and words is so sensitively adjusted that the interplay of the two does benefit them both. This was; eminently true from the first number “For AH Saints” (Sine Nomine' by Williams and continued so throughout every number in the program. It*was what gave the songs new and exciting life. Certainly the fervor and vitality of the fourteen men was at work for it was music that addressed the heart because it came from the heart. Members of the chorale are Paul Solem, tenor: David Griffith, tenor; Charles Kovach, tenor: Martin Lies, tenor: Frank Browning, tenor; Louis Marinaro, tenor; Henry Selvitelle, tenor: George McWhorter. baritone: Vernon Wicker, baritone; Alan Olsen, baritone; William Wiederanders, bass - baritone: Philip Steele, bass; Andrew Dirga, bass and Franklin Ehrhardt, bass. Karlsrud Soloist Mr. Karlsrud took the solo parts in Part I which included the
Hebrew chants V'Shomru and Ml Chctnocho, which proved to be a special treat for most of the audience. Part II included "O Fill! et Filiae” by Leisring: “Ave Verum” by Mozart; “La Danza” by Rossini which included a trio with chorus. Next came the five part rondo “The Rose Bathed in Dew” with William Wiederanders singing the fifth part as a solo counterpoint. Concluding Pa rt II was a novelty type song “Brumbasken I Bumba” by Grieg. Mussorgsky’s “The Coronation Scene” from “Boris Godunov” was an electrifying number with Mr. Karlsrud and the Corale. Here Louis Marinaro was second pianist with Mr. Johnson and it was a most fitting close to Part 111 which preceded the intermission. Four operatic selections, “Prisoner’s Choris” from “Fidelio” by Beethoven, “Una Furitva Lagrima” from ‘T Elisir d’ Amore” by Donizetti, “O’ Mimi, Tu Piu Non Torni”, from “Carmen” by Bizet, all but swept you off your chair. Soloists taking part in the above Part TV were Mr. Karlsrud. Paul Solem, Martin Lies and Alan Olsen. Student Prince Sigmund Romberg’s “Student Prince” Medley made up Part V which was an unusual but delightful arrangement. The medley included many favorites from the operetta with the following taking solo parts: David Griffith, George McWhorter, Charles Kovach, Franklin Ehrhardt and Martin Lies. Coming to the lighter side in Part VI, were “Drill, Ye Tarriers,” an American folk song “Green Sleeves,” an English folk song; “Swing Away, Pearly Gates” by Schmertz and “Joshua Fit De Battle Ob Jericho,” traditional. These were all especially arranged for the chorale with Mr. Karlsrud doing the solo portions. Encores included the ever-pleas-ing “Songs My Mother Taught Me” by Anton Dvorak, American Folk Johnny Sands and “Old Man River.” Mrs. Sherman Stucky, re-elect-ed president of the Adams County Civic Music Association, during the intermission, gave due and proper credit to her fellow officers and workers, in this, cultural enterprise of the county. She noted that in the drive for members the goal was" nearly met. More important still, was the fact that nearly 300 student tickets were sold. Such talent as the Karlsrud Chorale will create in this county a child audience of intellectually curious and creative, independent listeners whose tastes will one day be adventurous and honest — in short, the. kind of adult audience which .is often times half the making of great music in any city or county.
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Mrs. Frances Roloff, Lewis Drive, announces the engagement of her daughter, Carolyn Jean, to James K. Allendorph, son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Allendorph of 520 McKinnie Ave., Fort Wayne. Miss Roloff is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jess O. Daniels of Indiana street. She is a senior at Decatur high school. Her fiance attended South Side high school and is employed by Brandstrator Engineering, Fort Wayne. 1 Plans are 4 being made for a fall wedding.
Storms Do Damage In Midwest Areas By United Press International Tornadoes, blustery winds and damaging hail , winged through the Mid-west Monday night, turning farm buildings to tinder and snapping power lines. A tornado sliced through northwest Jones County, lowa,. causing heavy damage to two farms. It blew down sheds, barns and stacks of timber at the farms and ripped out utility poles and power lines. A tornado and high winds hit at least two western Wisconsin counties, leveling barns at least three farms. A farm worker was injured seriously when
TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1964
Miss Carolyn Jean Roloff — Photo by
struck by flying debris from a damaged barn. Severe thunderstorms moved through the Duluth-Superior along the Wisconsin and Minnesota border. .High winds, blinding rain and hail pelted the Lake Superior harbor cities, •causing .an estimated SIOO,OOO damage. Wet snow fell in the higher regions of the Rockies while cold showers fell at the lower elevations. ’ Widely scattered showers fell over most of the Far West. Maximum temperature readings ranged from the 40s in western Montana to slightly over 100 in the lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. Fair skies extended from the Gulf Coast to New England where temperatures were mild but were expected to drop today. °
