Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 132, Decatur, Adams County, 4 June 1964 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO., INC. ■■tered at the Decatur, Ind., Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller, Jr. President Mrs. John Shirk ..Vice President Mrs. A. R. Holthouse Secretary, Chas. E. Holthouse Treasurer Subscription Rates By Mail, in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $10.00; Six months, $5.50; 3 months, $3.00. By Mail, beyond Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $11.25; 6 months, $6.00; 3 months, $3.25. By Carrier, 35 cents per week. Single copies, 7 cents.
School - Room Television For the past five years nearly every Adams county school has tried and used the MP ATI airborne television. Most who have used it have been quite enthusiastic. The state has been broadcasting since 1959 with an experimental authorization from the FCC on UHS channels 72 and 76. They recently applied for regular authorization on six channels — 72, 74, 76, 78, 80 and 82. Educational leaders in this area are generally enthusiastic over this, and desire an expanded program; more than 1,000 letters and resolutions have been filed in favor of the move. They realize that the six channels requested will do the job of 114 ground-based channels. There just aren’t enough channels available for a ground instructional system, and also to provide commercial TV needs. But there are more than enough channels for MP ATl’s six air-borne channels, all groundbased educational channels requested, and all commercial channels that have any prospect of viable operation by 1975. At present, commercial stations would very much like to get hold of the educational channels, and MP ATI is a prime target, since it is one of the most successful of the educational channels, f We can’t help but feel that generally the nation will benefit more from educational television, as proposed, than it will from more channels of third-grade-oriented programs that dull the human mind. MP ATI has even proposed that four of its six channels be limited to regular in-school hours, and that they be available for ground-based assignments during prime viewing evening and week-end hours. Revolutions in knowledge must, be gotten to our children, despite a teacher shortage, mounting waves of student enrollments, and increasing economic binds on public support for education. t Teachers also learn valuable tips on classroom technique that help them become more effective and valuable in the classroom. Educational TV through MPATI has proved ;■ itself, and should be continued, despite the screams ('and cries of those who worship the almighty dollar more than the future of their own children. Editorial written by Dick Heller
TV PROGRAMS
WANE-TV » " - Channel 15 THURSDAY Evening 6:oo—Bachelor Father 6:3O—CBS News 7K>©—Big News 7:3o—Password B:oo—Rawhide 9:oo—Perry Mason 10:00—'Meredith Wilson Special 11:00—Big News Final 11:30 —Adventures In Paradise FRIDAY Moral ng 7:26—Daily Word 7:3o—Summer Semester B:oo—Captain Kangaroo 9:oo—Divorce Court 10:00—Sounding Board 10:30 —I Love Lucy j--11:0 —The McCoys 11:30—Pete and Gladys Afternoon 12:00—Love of Life 12:25—C8S News 12:45 —Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone Show 1:25 —The Mid-day News I:3o—As the World Turns 2:00 —Password 2:3o—Houseparty 3:00—To Tell the Truth .3:25 —CBS News 3:3o—Edge of Night 4:oo—Secret Storm 4:3o—Early Show: “Susannah of the Mounties" Evenlag 6:oo—Bachelor Father 6:3O—CBS News 7:oo—Big News 7:30 —The Great Adventure 8:30 —Route 66 9:30 —Twilight Zone 10:00 —Alfred Hitchcock Hour 11:00 —-Big News Final 11:30 —Award Theatre "The Man Who Knew Too Much” WKJG-TV Channel 33 THURSDAY Evenlag 6XI0 —News 6:15 —Gatesway to Sports 6:25 —Weatherman 6:3o—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Trails West 7:30 —Indy: The Challenge B:3o—Dr. Kildare 9:30 —Hasel 10 XX)—Suspense Theatre 11:00—News and Weather 11:15 —Spores Today 11:20—Tonight Show FRIDAY Morning 7:oo—Today 9:00 —Bozo Show 9:3o—Jane Flaningan Show 9:ss—Faith to Live By 10:00—Bay When 10:25—NBC News 10:34) —Word for Word 11:00—Concentration ll':3o—Jeopardy Afternoon 13:00 —News 13:10—Weather
Central Daylight Time
12:15 —The Wayne Rothgeb Show 12:30 —Truth or Consequences I:oo—The Best of Groucho I:3o—Your First Impression 2:00 —Let’s Make A Deal 2:30 —The Doctors 3X)0 —Another World 3:30 —You Don’t Say “ 4:oo—Match Game 4:3o—Make Room for Daddy s:oo—"Mighty Hercules" 5 :30—Rifleman Evening 6:oo—News 6:ls—Gatesway to Sports 6:2s—Weatherman 6:3o—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Ripcord 7:3o—lnternational Showtime 8:30—Bob Hope Presents 9:3o—That Was the Week That Was 10:00 —Jack Parr Show 11:00 —News & Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20 —The Tonight Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 THURSDAY Evening 6:oo—Ron Cochran — News • 6:15 —21 News Report 6:30 —Huckleberry Hound 7:oos— Expedition 7:30 —The Flfntstones B:oo—Donna Reed B:3o—My Three Sons 9:oo—Ensign O'Toole 9:3o—Jimmy Dean Show 10:30 —ABC News Reports 11:00 —Bob Young — ■ News 11:10 —Local News • 11:15 —Steve Allen Show FRIDAY .Morning 9:oo—Fun Time 9:3o—The Jack LaLanne Show . 10:00—Father Knows Best • 10:30 —The Price is Right 11:00—Get the Message. 11:30—Missing Links '.w Afternoon 12:00 —Noon Show 12:30 —Tennessee Ernie Ford a, 1 :00 —Mid-day Matinee 1:3O —6O 1 ” News Headlines 2:2s—Agricultural News 2:30 —Day in Court 2:ss—News 3:oo—General Hospital 3:3o—Queen for a Day 4 :00—-Trailmaster s:oo—Mickey Mouse Club 5:30 —Lone Ranger -..-t— ■ y Evening 6:oo—Ron Cochran — News 6:15—21 News Report ' . 6:3o—Magilia Gorilla 7:oo—True Adventure 7 :30—‘Ilestry B:3o—Burke’s Law • 9:3o—Price Is Right 10:00—Fight of the Week > 10:45—Make that Spare 11:00—Bob Young — News 11:10—Local News • 11:15—Steve Allen Show — DRIVE-IN — ‘Thrill of; It All" Wed. Thurs. Fri. 8:30. "New Kind of Love’ 10:15.
Todays Market P. B STEW AMT A CO. Corrected June 4 160 to 170 14.85 170 to 180 -15.35 180 to 190 - 15.35 190 to 220 15.60 220 to 240 — 15.10 240 to 250 14.85 250 to 260 15.60 260 to 270 - 14.10 270 to 280 14.10 280 to 300 13.60 Roughs 300 down 12.50 300 to 330 — 12.25 330 to 360 12.00 360 to 400 11.75 400 to 450 1125 450 to 500 11.00 500 to 550 10.75 550 up 10.50 Stags 9.00 Boars 8.00 to 9.00
WHOLESALE EGO QUOTATIONS Furnished By DECATUR FARMS Corrected June 4 Large White Eggs .22 Large Brown Eggs .22 Medium White .17 Pullets 13 GRAIN PRICES Furnished bj Stockman Farm Service Corrected June 4 New Wheat No. 151.35 Ear Corn 100 lb. $1.67 Shelled Corn $1.19 Soybeans ...i $2.40 Soybeans delivered to Soya $2.45 New soybeans, 2.25 Oats $ .56 Indianapolis Livestock INDIANAPOLIS (UPD-Live-stock: Hogs 5,000; barrows and gilts uneven, steady to 25 lower; 1 and 2, 190-225 lb 16.25-16.50; few 16.75- 1 to 3, 190-225 lb 15.75- ; 225-240 lb 15.25-15.75; sows steady to strong; 1 to 3, 300-400 lb 13.25-14.00; 2 and 3, 400-600 lb 12.50-1325. Cattle 650; calves 750 steers and heifers steady; choice steers 20.50; low to average choice 20.25; mixed good and low choice 19.00-19.50; load good 18.75; choice heifers 19.50; good to low choice 17.50-19.00; cows mostly 50 lower; utility and commercial 12.00-1-14.00; bulls largely 50 lower; utility and ° commercial 16.50-18.50; vealers fully 2.00 lower; good and choice 20.00-24.00; few high choice 25.00-26.00. Shep 100; spring lambs steady; choice and prime 24.0024.50. Chicago Produce CHICAGO (UPD—Produce: Live poultry, too few receipts to report prices. Cheese, processed loaf 39-43%; brick 38-43%; longhorns 4014-42; Swiss <BO-100 lb blocks) Grade A 4714-49; B 45-47; C 43-45. , Butter, steady; 93 score 5714; 92 score 5714; 90 score 56; 89 score 54%. Eggs, steady; white large extras 28; mixed large extras 28; mediums 22. LEGAL NOTICE EXECL'TORS* SALE OF REAL ESTATE Notice is hereby given that the undersigned John V. Heller and Verea Johnson, as Executors of the Estate of Minnie J. Heller, deceased, by direction and order of the Adams Circuit Court in Cause No. 5928, will offer for sale at Public Auction, on the premises, at the hour of 10 o'clock AM. on the lath day of June, T 964. the following described REAL ESTATE: West half of Northwest quarter of Section 22, Township 28 North, Range 13 East,-con-taining 80 acres more or less, in Preble Township, Adams County, Indiana. ALSO: will offer for sale at Public Auction, on the premises, located on State Highway No. 224, in Preble, Adams County, Indiana, at the hour of 2 o’clock P.M. on the 13th day of June, 1964, the following described real estate: In Lot Number Fourteen (14) in David Werling’s First Addition to the Town of Preble —as — the same is —designated on the Recorded Plat of said Addition. Said real estate iw to be sold free of all liens and encumbrances except tenant's leasehold interest and except current taxes: Twenty per cent down on day of Sale, balance upon delivery of abstract of title and Executors’ Deed approved by the Adams Court. Sale to be for not less than two thirds of the full appraised value thereof. Subject to the approval of the Adams Circuit Court. JOHN V. HELLER and VEREA JOHNSON, EXECITORS' of the Estate of Minnie J. Heller, deceased. ‘ . SEVERIN H. SCHURGER, Attorney for Executors. 5/28, 6/4.
GRAND OPEHIRG SPECIAL KREIGH'S FREE 10c. CORE With the Purchase of Any SUNDAE, SODA or MILK SHAKE FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1964
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Musi Aven Reds Takeover In Asia NEW YORK (UPD — It’s either keep the Communists from taking over Southeast Asia or else it’s the Reds on our doorstep, says a blind woman who for a quarter of a century has helped the handicapped in the Orient. “We just don’t seem to believe that the Communists mean what they say,” said Genevieve Caulfield. “They’ve told us they intend to conquer the world. Both Khrushchev and Mao have said it. “Lose Southeast Asia, then it’s the infiltration of the Philippines, Hawaii next, California. .. “To every body who dies in Southeast Asia, a thousand could die in a later war. The Vietnamese alone have had 40,000 casualties.” • Given High Honor Politics and the hot spot of Asia interest this woman, although it is for her one woman “peace corps” operation that President Johnson recently presented her with the Presidential- Medal of Honor. It is the highest civilian honor the United States bestows. Genevieve Caulfield was born 76 years ago in Suffolk, Va., and was blinded by a nursery accident when she was three months old. She attended the Perkins School for the Blind and later Overbrook School for the Blind. She was 17 when a discriminatory article about the Japanese was read to her by a teacher. She decided to be a one-wom-an envoy to show the true spirit of Americans. To prepare for a future as a teacher, she attended Trinity College, Washington, D. C„ and got her degree from Columbia University, New York. Paid Own Way , " The year was 1923 when she went to Japan, she recalled in an interview. And unlike today’s peace corpsmen, she paid her own way. Her stay with the Japanese lasted until 1939 when the growing threat of war was everywhere. But instead of leaving Asia, she moved on to Bangkok, and it was here that she started her schools for training the blind educationally and vocationally. A foundation for the blind operates the the older one on the outskirts of Bangkok, the other at Chieng Mai, in north Thailand. The foundation gets some governmant support; the rest comes from the Thais and foreigners. In 1956, President Ngo Dinh Diem of Viet Nam (he was killed in a coup last year) asked her to set up a program for the blind in Saigon. The program is privately supported, she said, though the Association of Friends of Viet Nam. Presbyterians Study Decision On Taxes HANOVER, Ind. (UPD — The Indiana Synod of the United Presbyterian Church may decide at its 139th annual session here June 9-11 whether to pay the Indiana sales tax on business transactions of its state offices and agencies despite an exemption for religious organizations. The Synod’s Council earlier this year approved payment of the tax on a temporary basis pending a final decision by the Synod itself, as a voluntary means of carrying out its philosophy on separation of church and state. Chicago Livestock CHICAGO (UPD—Livestock: Hogs 5,000; steady to 25 lower; mixed No 1-3 190-230 lb 15.75-16.50; few lots No 1-2 200220 lb 15.75-17.00 ; 25 head at 17.00; 75 head at 17.25; No 2-3 200-220 lb 15.50-16.25; No 1-3 230250 lb 15.00-15.75; No 2-3 240-270 lb 14.50-15.25? 260-290 lb 14.2514.75. Cattle 700 calves 10; about steady; part load choice 1000 lb slaughter steers 21.00;- few good and low choice 18.00 - 20.00; standard Holsteins 1029 lb 17.75; canner and cutter 12-00-14.00. Sheep 200; steady; few lots choice and prime 90 - 100 lb spring lamb 25.00; mostly choice 23.50-24.50.
California GOP Braniflin Endorsell Submit Budgets Leaders Seek !!! For Institutions
To Heal Wounds SAN FRANCISCO (UPDCaljfornia Republicans doubted today that the narrow victory in Tuesday’s primary for Arizona conservative Barry Goldwater represented a sharp turn to the right for the GOP in the nation’s most populous state. Most agreed it virtually assured Goldwater the party’s presidential nomination at the Republican National Convention here in mid-July. But they felt his 51-49 percentage win over New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller for the state’s 86 convention votes was far from a clear-cut victory. One source used these mathematics: About 70 per cent of the registered Republicans voted in the primary and 51 per cent of those voted for Goldwater while 49 per cent cast their ballots for Rockefeller. This means Goldwater’s win represented the votes of about 38 per cetlt of the 2.9 million registered Republicans in California. “It’s really a minority win,” said the source. In past years, the party has been reluctant to support any but middle-of-the-roaders in the general election — and to win it must pull some Democrats, who hold a 3-2 . registration edge. To plan the campaign strategy, Caspar W. Weinberger, San Francisco lawyer and chairman of the state GOP Central Committee, has called a peace conference of warring factions for San Francisco June 15. It’s an attempt to heal wounds created by the vigorous pre-primary campaign. -— — He has enlisted the aid of Rep. Melvin Laird of Wisconsin, chairman of the GOP Platform Committee, and California Republican Congressmen Glenard Lipscomb and Robert Wilson. The three will speak at the session.
Present plans call for a closed-door meeting unfettered by the presence of newsmen to report what is said. But reporters will be briefed afterward.
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Lafayette attorney Roger D. Branigin received the endorsement of the 10th District Democratic party organization Wednesday night in his bid for the nomination for governor of Indiana. Twenty county chairmen and vice chairmen meeting at Hagerstown approved district backing of Branigin in the sirway contest for the nomination. They also endorsed unopposed Sen. Vance Hartke for renomination. Former Bloomington Mayor Tom Lemon, one of Branigin’s rivals for the nomination, said at a 2nd District rally at Royal Center that despite “pressure to stampede the delegates” to the June 12 state convention he will remain in the race. “We serve notice now that we entered this gubernatorial race to win,” Lemon said. “We have the loyal support of a strong bloc of delegates in all parts of the state. We have strength in the ranks of labor, among farmers and among those Democrats who believe in honesty and integrity in public office.” At South Bend, Rep. William Bray, one of seven Republican candidates for governor, said Wednesday night he was pleased with the momentum of his campaign. ‘,'We had a late start in the race but in the past two weeks we have talked wtih delegates from the Ohio River to Lake Michigan and the response we have received is wonderful,” Bray said. State Sen. D. Russell Bontrager of Elkhart, one of four candidates for the GOP senatorial nomination, said at Richmond Wednesday night that “America has been boobytrapped again’,’ in connection with its participation in a movement to force a coalition government on the people of Laos. “Thanks to the stubborn refusal of the Democratic leadership to believe Khrushchev when he says his intention is to bury us, the Soviet butcher was given a breathing spell to enable him to regroup his strategy and his forces,” Bontrager said.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— New Albany’s gain apparently will be Rockville’s loss according to a budget submitted Wednesday by the Indiana State. Board of Health. . Dr. A. C. Offutt, state health commissioner, submitted budgets for three state institutions to the Indiana Budget Committee for the next two years. Budgets for other health institutions Will be filed later. The budget for the Southern Indiana Tuberculosis Hospital at New Albany calls for $1.6 million in construction and repair work. The major portion of $1.2 million is for a 100-bed hospital for intensive tuberculosis care and a new administration wing. Offutt explained that the Indiana Tuberculosis Council had endorsed this construction but had objected to another plan calling for new construction as the Indiana State Hospital for Chest Diseases at Rockville. “The proposed new construction at the New Albany location would then make it possible to phase out the hospital at Rockville as a tuberculosis facility,” Offutt explained. Os the 100 beds, 30 would be devoted to what the budget makers referred to as “recalcitrant patient detention facilities.” In Indiana, tuberculosis carriers • may be arrested and assigned to a hospital for treatment involuntarily. The other two construction budgets submitted by Offutt Wednesday were for the Indiana School for the Deaf at Indianapolis, $2.8 million; and the Indiana State Soldiers’ Home at Lafayette, $2.4 million. The rpain new construction at the School for the Deaf would be a two-story dormitory build* ing for students age 9 to 12 and contain 18 classrooms. A food service and infirmary also is requested. “Based on general population predictions, a dormitory now under construction which will house 120 students will be full by the time it is ready for odcupany in 1965,” Offutt reported. He said the additional dormitory building now being
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sought could not be constructed before September, 1967, if approved by the 1965 Legislature. - "If it is not initiated during the next biennium, the school will again be deferring admissions, thereby depriving many children of the opportunity for an education,” Offutt said. The Soldiers’ Home seeks a 100-bed hospital and an 80-bed geriatric nursing unit, among other construction. Os this sl.l million for the hospital would be from state funds with $550,000 from the Soldiers’ Home Building Fund. This is a fund accumulated from payments of Veterans housed at the institution. However, Offutt said, “ the building fund would not have enough money in it to build a hospital facility until 1970. “Currently there .is a large waiting list of Veterans who need intensive nursing care which their families are unable to provide,” he said. Report New Rioting By Korean Students SEOUL, South Korea (UPI) — Students rioted again today in cities throughout Korea, stormed a provincial government building, cut telephone lines and stoned police. An estimated 50,000 were reported under control elsewhere in the country by nightfall. Hundreds of demonstrators were arrested. But up to mid-afternoon, an estimated 14,000 college and high school demonstrators had rioted in provincial cities demanding the ouster of President Park Chung Hee. The worst outbreak was in the provincial capital of Kwangju, 170 miles south of Seoul. Other demonstrations took place in Pusan, Chungchon, Inchon and Mokpo. There were unsuccessful attempts to demonstrate in Seoul.
