Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 149, Decatur, Adams County, 24 June 1964 — Page 10

PAGE TWO-A

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by- r* THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO.. INC. Baterad at the Dec.tar, Ind., Poet Office as Second Pass Matter Dick D. Htffler, Jr. . President Mrs. John Shirk Vice President Mrs. A. R. Holthouse Secretary Chas. E. Hothouse Treasurer By Mail, in Adams and Adjotoing 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, 36 cents per week. Stogie copies, 7 cents. M What He’s Done Why should any Adams county person support our senior senator, R. Vance Hartke for reelection? Because he has visited here, spoken here, and we all know him? Because he is a fighting Democrat? These are good reasons, but harttty good enough to get out and fight hard to reelect him. Let's took at some of the things he’s voted for: 1. Lower Federal income taxes for «1L 1. Protecting the rights of all our citizens. 3. Protecting American business property in foreign countries. 4. Fair political broadcasting code, enabling honest debate without undue restrictions on radio and TV stations. 5. The Hartke Higher Education BiH, backed by President Johnson, and every major education organization. ’ <S. Tax changes to encourage expansion and modernizing of business and industry to create ,r_ hew jobs. 7. Promotion of Indiana products for sale abroad. Senator Hartke’s record has been so outstanding that it is almost in danger of being overlooked. His progressive voting record and leadership within the Johnson administration is part and parcel of the longest period of economic boom in the history of this country! This is no time to forget, and allow us to backslide into a recession. Sen. Hartke is vitally needed in Congress. Our previous two senators, in two decades, achieved no position of leadership; even our colorless congressman, E. Ross Adair, has little in■)fluence on legislation. Yet R. Vance Hartke is the enviable position of chairman of the Senate election committee, third highest post in the Senate hierarchy! Sen. Hartke has had a major part in appointing our own Decatur postmaster, John Boch, who has served so well; the Pleasant Millls postmaster, Mrs. Shirley Everett; Monroe postmaster Austin Merriman; and many others. He has listed closely to the -county Democratic organization, and cooperated with them in every way he could. This strengthens political bonds, and is a good thing. Indiana has become a land es lakes through flood control and recreation projects; hospital, library, and college help has arrived; Indiana received dust year $575 million in defense contracts, 14t h in the nation; our first national park in the state, Lincoln Boyhood park, was established; etc., etc. Sen. Hartke has done a fine job, in the main, and deserved the wholehearted support of every area citizen. Editorial writWft By —± — Bick fieitet

T V PROGRAMS

WAME-TV Channel 15 WEDNESDAY Evealag 6': 00—Bachelor Father 6:3O—CBS Ne*rs 7:oo—Bis New. 7:3O—CBS Reports B:oo—Sum & Substance 11 »:00—The Hillbmtes 9:30 —“Once Upon a Mattress’ 11:00—Big News Final 11:30 —Award Theatre: "Thirteen Hours By Air” • " e THURSDAY Herat ng 7:2s—Daily Word 7:3o—Summer Semester B:oo—Capain Kangaroo "9:oo—Sugarfoot 10:00—Sounding Board 10:30—I Love Lucy 11:00—The McCoys 11:30—Pete and Gladys Afteraeea 12:00—Love of Life 12:25—C8S News \ 12:30—Search for Tomorrow 12:55—Guiding Light I:oo—Ann Colone Show I:2s—Mid-day News I:3o—As the World Turns 2 :00—Pa ss word ~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: “Sons of the Legion” Evening 6:oo—Bachelor Father 6:3O—CBS News 7:oo—Big News 7:3o—Password B:oo—Rawhide 9:00 —Perry Mason 10:00—The Nurses 11:00—Big News Final 11:30—Award Theatre: “Scandal Street” WKJG-TV Channel 33 WEDNESDAY Evening .—6:O0 —News ~ - ...«^6:ls—Gatesway-to Sports 6:2s—Weatherman 6:30 —Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:00 —Men Into Space 7:30 —The . Virginian 9:00 —Espionage 10:00—Eleventh «Heur 11:00 —News aftd Weather 11:15—Sports Today 11:20— Tonight Show THURSDAY Warning 7:00 —Today ~ 3:00—Bozo Show 9:3o—Jane Flnntagan Show 3:ss—Faith to Live By 10:03 —Say Wfcen ’ 10:25—NBC *ws 10:30 —Word for,Word 114*0—Jeopardy * Afternann 12:00 —News 12:10 —The Weatherman • 12:15 —Wayne Rothgeb Show

Central Daylight Tima

12:30—Truth or -Conseguences 12:55—N8C News v o f I:oo—The Best of Groucho I:3o—Your First Impression 2:oo—Let’s Make A Deal 2:2S—NBC News i 2:3o—The Doctors 3:oo—Another W orld 3:3o—You Don’t Say 4:oo—Match Games 4:2S—NBC News 4.3o—Make Room for Daddy s:oo—Mighty Hercules 5:30 —Rifleman Evening 6:oo—News 6:ls—Gatesway -to Sports 6:25 —W eatherman 6:3o—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:00 —Trails West 7:30 —Temple Houston B:3o—Dr. Kildare „ 9:3o—Hazel 10:0o—Suspense Theatre 11:00—News „ 5 •'> 11:45—Sports Today 11:20 —Tonight Show WPTA-TV Channel 21 WEDNESDAY Evening 6:oo—Ron Cochran — News 6:15—2J News Report — 6:3o—Dick Tracy s. 7:00 —Bold Journey 7:3o—Ozxie and Harriet B:oo—Patty Duke Show B:3o—Farmers Daughter 9:oo—Ben Casey 10:00 —77 Sunset Strip 11:00 —Bob Young — News 11:10—Local News / 11:15—Steve Allen Show THURSDAY , Mnrnlng 9:30 —The Jack LaLanne ShoW 10:00—Father Knows Best . 10:30—The Price is Right 11:00—Get the Message 11:30—Missing Links Afterneon 12:00—Noon Show 12:30 —Tennessee Ernie Ford 1:00 —Mid-day Matinee 1:30—60” News Headlines 2:2s—Agricultural News 2:30 —Day in Court 2:55 —News 3:oo—General Hospital 8:30 —Queen for a Day 4:00 —Trailmaster <4 5:00 —Mickey Mouse Club _ 5:30 —Lone Ranger Evening 6«00 —Ron Cochran — News 6:15 —21 News Report 6:3o—Huckleberry Hound 7:30 —The Flintstones B:oo—Donna Reed B:Bo—My,Three Sons 9:oo—Enrfign O’Toole 9:3o—The Jimmy Dean Show 10:30 —ABC Reports 11:00 —Bpb Young — News 11:10 —Local News 11:15' —Steve Allen Show * — DRIVE-IN^— : "CornedV , of Terrors" Wed. Thur* Fri. 8:45 "Man in the Mid- , die”', 10:30.

jforrusoM UMMMOT* I f ii— -4-e | imrjwid ol i 1.1 I |» ■ I mi iw on* THE UNEN— —, A fair* constant ratio bo* twe«B tha empioßd aad urn employed taSunited State* over the past four years j* noted <m fids Neva* chart According to the National Industrial Conference Board, employment hit a record 70.6 milliou in April. 1 while about 4 mffite store j unemployed. ‘ Airlines Worry On Shortage Os Pilots WASHINGTON (UPI) — The airlines are getting concerned over a problem that hasn’t existed since the dawn of commercial aviation —a shortage of pitots. United and Trans World, to cite two examples, are recruiting actively. • And the Federal Aviation Agency has a special aviation manpower commission at work determining exact industry labor needs, with pilots one of the most troublesome areas. The shortage, which is spotty at present but threatens to become a serious problem in relatively few years, stems from these factors: —The airlines. ’chief source of pitot material, the military, seems to be drying up. The increasing emphasis on .unmanned missiles is one reason. The fact that 75 per cent of military pitots are choosing to stay in uniform is another. Lack Recruiting —The airlines themselves have lacked an aggressive recruiting and employment program among the nation’s youth. In fact, one top United official said bluntly: “The airlines have failed to promote flying as a worthwhile career.” .*’>

—The airlines require a student pilot to have at least a commercial pilot’s license when he ’ applies. At present, it costs abeut $2,500 to obtain a commercial “ticket” from a private flying school and this is an expense which undoubtedly has been a 'deterrent. • ‘ 4—Almost unnoticed, the average age level bf airline pilot has been creeping upward. Lt was 37 in 1959. It now is over 40. The Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA) says more than 25 per cent of its 14,000 members will reach the mandatory retirement age of 60 within the next 15 years. ALPA’s records show that more than 8,000 pilots WiR have to leave the cockpit in the next two decades. Sitaatien Is Critical The situation is considered critical enough for some airlines to be talking about starting their own primary flight schools. This is a frank admission that' economics is a major reason why good pilot material hasn't been coming into commercial aviation. It takes at least 165 hours — at a cost of about sl7 an hour — to obtain a commercial license. That covers use of an airplane and instructor. To get an instrument rating runs another S7OO. “Sound investment” accurately describes a decision to become an airline pilot. United’s starting salary is SSOO a month, with sizeable increases every year. By the end of the third year, the second officer or cqpilot on a UAL propeller-driven plane will be earning nearly SI,OOO a month — double the starting salary which is no small jump in just three years. And veteran captains fe-slc around $35,000 a year or higher.

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Third Ecumenical Session Critical

By LOUIS CASSELS United Press International The • Vatican Ecumenical Council, which generated such high hopes during its first session to 1662. drifted into a dangerous crisis in the closing days of its second session test Ml. The forthcoming third session, scheduled to begin on Sept. 14, will be crucial. It will show whether the Catholic Church under Pope Paul VI intends to push forward with the great movement of renewal and reform launched by Pope John XXIII—or whether the reins*of power have been seized once again by the standpat conservatives of tbe Roman Curia. This warning is sounded by three new books which focus a bright light of critical appraisal on the 1963 session of the council. They are: “Observer in Rome, 1 ’ by Robert McAfee Brown (Doubleday); “The Second Session” by Xavier Ryme (Farrar, Straus) and “The Pilgrim,” by Michael Serafian (Farrar, Straus.) Dr. Brown is a distinguished Presbyterian theologian and professor of religion at* Stanford University. He attended the council as a Protestant observer (and incidentally won undying fame in Roman society as the man who said: “Some of my best friends are Jesuits — but I wouldn’t want my daughter to marry one.’’) It will surprise no one who knows him that his book is the wittiest and most readable of the lot, as well as the most charitable in its judgments. Distrubed By Events But even Dr. Brown, who is plainly reluctant to say anything adverse about the council, admits that his optimism was “chastened” by events at the second session which “demonstrated that the progressives were not so much in control of things” as .everyone previously had assumed. During the last 10 days of the second session the Curia conservatives somehow managed to prevent the council from acting on two statements which progressives strongly supported. One would have put the Catholic Church on record in favcr of religious liberty. The other would have condemned antiSemitism and made defer that

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.the Jews must art be node a scapegoat peuple lor the crucifixion of Christ. There is no doubt that both statements, if put to « vote, weald have been approved overwhelmingly. lAfcet disturbs Dr. Brown—end many ufltata1s that ’a minority within the council was able to thwart the manifest will of the majority ” Outvoted on the floor, the Curia conservatives leaeriad to backstage maneuvers—■and succeeded at toast to postponing action on the two stat—urtc until the third session. Dr. Brown ends his book with an affirmation of faith that the council will resume its forward movement at toes fall’s session Use Fautoi—i The two other authors are Catholics who apparently feel that due regard for the virtue of prudeice requires them to write under pseudonyms. The identity of “Xavier Rynne” no longer is regarded as a great mystery by those who are aware that one of <be council’s expert consultants is a professor of church history at Catholic University in Washington, D. C., Fr. Francis Xavier Murphy, whose mother’s maiden name was Rynne. But the grapevine has not yet penetrated the secret of “Michael Serafian,” who is identified by the publisher only as a Catholic diplomat with wide acquaintance in the Vatican. “Serafian” propounds the gloomy thesis that Pope Paul VI caved in under pressure from the Curia conservatives, who persuaded bim that Italy would go Communist if the church became too “liberal.” Without knowing who “Serafian” is, it is impossible to evaluate his credentials. Matter Os Principle “Xavier Rynne” is a much more reliable reporter. He does not believe that Pope Paul deserted the progressives. On the contrary, he says, the Pope’s reluctance to intervene in coun? oil proceedings was a “matter of principle,” based on the conviction that wire-pulling from the papal throne would repudiate the very point that the council’s progressives were trying to make about bishops having a real voice in the decisions of the church.

Urges Ref om In Electoral College Setup By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Internatlenal Regardless of his civil rights Voting record, Sen. Barry Oeidwater will find the presidential electoral college rigged against him. Th electoral college would be rigged against any more or toss conservative presidential candidate. State by state, presidential electors are chosen on a win-ner-take-all basis. That system has made the left wing racial, labor pressure groups political power houses in ÜB. politics. These pressure groups are concentrated in the great cities such as New York, Chicago, Detroit and Philadelphia. The big industrial states with the most numerous electoral votes mere often than not are won by the candidate supported by these pressure groups. The big concentrations of population are too much for the rural and small town voters where a more conservative point of view may be expected to prevail. Elected By Cities The AFL-CIO Industrial Union Department (IUD) summarized this situation in a discussion of the meaning of the 1960 presidential election. The IUD said: “Kennedy was elected largely by big city voters.” The Republican National Committee presented statistics proving the IUD to be correct. For example: In 1960 Richard M. Nixon carried 70 Michigan counties for a plurality of 244,880 votes outside Detroit. John F. Kennedy carried 13 Michigan • counties. His Detroit plurality was 311,721 votes. Detroit provided

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Kennedy with all of Michigan’s „ electoral votes. Nixon’s Illinois plurality outside Chicago was 447,454 votes. Kennedy piled up a 456,312 vote plurality in Chicago and took ell of mmols electoral votes. Philadelphia and Pittsburgh delivered all of Pennsylvania to Kennedy. New York City delivered all of New York state. The racial and tabor pressure groups are among the yeasty political activist elements of left wing U.S. politics, t of which Americans for Demo- ’ cratic Action (ADA) probably ■ is the most effective insteu- ! ment. The lefties are well ■ aware of their advantages unl der the present system of choos- ■ ing presidential electors. Oppose Reforms . ADA, the National Association for the Advancement of ‘ Colored People, Walter Reu--1 tber’s CIO and others have batI ted down every attempt to reform the system. Some years ago more than 50 senators joined in sponsoring a reform ’ measure that would have yanked ’ the rug out from under the pressure groups. Ihe pressure groups moved in hard and fast ‘ opposing the proposal.

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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1964

FINAL SAY—Robert B. Mey. ner, former governor of New Jersey, has been named administrator of the Cigarette Advertising Code. In this position, he willt have flmd authority in determining whether advertising com*, plies with code standards.