Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 178, Decatur, Adams County, 29 July 1964 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

$5,830,000 Loan To Ball State College WASHINGTON (UPD -The Community Facilities Administration Tuesday announced approval of a 15,830,000 loan to Ball State Teachers College, Muncie, Ind., to help construct a dormitory complex. An additional $4,856,000 will te added by the conege to build six buildings, which will include accommodations for single and married students.

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Indiana Highway Planning Praised INDIANAPOLIS <UPI) — U.S. Highway Administrator Rex M? Whitton had to step through picket Hnes Tuesday on his way to praise interstate highway planning and hand over a 823 million check to Governor Welsh. Members of the Indianapolis

Taxpayers Association were protesting possible displacement of 5,000 Negroes and others because of interstate routes planned in and near Indianapolis. They handed out literature outside a hotel where WeL«»h and Whitton conferred. One Negro .«>pokesman said adequate housing for those who would be displaced was impossible to find and the situation could turn Indianapolis into ‘‘another Rochester.’’ David Cohen, chairman of the

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Indiana Highway Commission, said details of intercity loops of Interstates 65 and 70 had already gone through public hearing and planning and were settlod. Whilton said patronage turnover in the past has kept Ijtdisna from being a leader in interstate construction. He and Welsh noted 25 per cent of Purdue University graduates in civil engineering were headed for state highway department work, many because of a new career employment

program. Welsh said Indiana’s allocation of I.ItW miles of interstate routes were open, on drawing boards or in construction. Some 274 miles are open, and another 360 will be complete by the end of the year. Whitton’s check for $22,763,924 included federal reimbursement for state road construction the past two months. An agreement was signed to speed up payments on a spot audit basis in the future. Indiana was the 22nd state to

Miss Marilyn Hake Nursing Graduate Miss Marilyn Hake, of Decatur, is among the students who will graduate this weekend from the Holy Cross school of nursing at South Bend. sign such an agrement. The federal government pays 90 per cent for interstate anil 50 per cent for state roads.

Goldwater Mapping Campaign Strategy

WASHINGTON (UPD — Republican presidential nominee Barry M. Goldwater huddled today with the top GOP leaders of the Senate and House to coordmate planning for the coming election campaign. The Arizona senator was joined by his running mate, Rep. William E. Miller, R-N.Y. the viee presidential nominee, and new GOP National Chairman Dean Burch in the meeting in an office of House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck, Ind. Just before the closed session, Goldwater said he did not know anything about a reported conversation he was said to have had by telephone Tuesday with Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton, his chief rival for the presidential nomination at the GOP National Convention. Denies Scranton Some Republican congressmen who attended a closeddoor meeting with Goldwater Tuesday said they understood Goldwater to say that he had just talked with Scranton. Rep. Clark [MacGregor, R-Minn., said Goldwater reported that he had received a new pledge of active campaign support from the Pennsylvania governor. ——: But Goldwater said today this was not correct. He said he could not understand the conflict but added, "I don’t even know where he (Scranton) is.” Among the Goldwater campaign plans expected to come up at today’s high-level meeting was the possibility of a series of television debates with President Johnson. From Tuesday's meeting came word that Goldwater was eager to take on Johnson. Today, Goldwater’s campaign manager, Denison Kitchel, said this had been the senator’s position all along—and said he believed Goldwater would get the better of such an exchange. Johnson has- not committed himself to any debates. Seeks Party Unity Kitchel also said in a television interview that Goldwater is making an all-out drive to get party unity. He appeared on NBC’s Today .•program. "Nobody is going to be read out of the party,” Kitchel said. But he conceded that there was a “handful” who felt that they could not join in Goldwater’s campaign. In today’s meeting, Kitchel

Ruby's Attorneys Claim Witness Lied DALLAS (UPD—Jack Ruby’s attorneys took the first step Tuesday in their appeals battle ■to save hirn from the electric chair, claiming the prosecution’s chief witness lied. The claim was the main point in a bill of exceptions filed in the court of Dist. Judge Joe B. Brown, who presided at the murder trial that convicted Ruby of slaying Lee Harvey Oswald. •Deadline for filing the documents was Tuesday at court closing and the lawyers beat it by only half an hour. The bill included a charge that police Sgt. Patrick T. Dean lied on the witness stand when he testified Ruby told him 10 minutes after the shooting of Oswald that he had planned for two days to kill the accused assassin of President Kennedy. It called Dean’s testimony “perjured, harmful, prejudiced, inadmissible and inflammatory.” Assistant Dist. Atty. William F. Alexander, one of the prosecutors at the Ruby trial, said the charge was “the unsworn allegation of a disgruntled defense lawyer." , Since the trial transcript is not complete, the possibility exists that lawyers may find what they consider additional errors when they read the portion yet to be transcribed. Brown has 10 days in which to either approve or disapprove the exceptions and Ruby’s lawers have five days in which to answer him. The case will go to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the highest state court for criminal cases, which will probably thicket it for hearing next January or February. If the Texas court decides against Ruby, his next step would be the federal courts. If they. too. uphold the sentence, his only hope of avoiding electrocution would be by clemency of Gov. John Connally, who was wounded by the same man who killed Kennedy.

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said Goldwater did not plan to "dictate” any strategy, but rather would discuss the legislation still pending “and what their stand should be.” Asked what role he thought former President Dwight D. Eisenhower would play in the Goldwater campaign, Kitchel said he could not say “specifically.” But he said that Eisenhower did tell Goldwater that he would be “happy to participate” in his campaign. Kitchel said Eisenhower asked that “we line up a program that fits into his commitments.” First Strike On Goldwater In Campaign By LYLE WILSON United Press International It is strike one, called, on Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, the 1964 Republican nominee for president. President Johnson fire balled the 1964 fiscal year spendingdeficit figures past Goldwater so fast last week that the senator must have misread them, if he saw them at all. The senator would not have permitted the President free choice to claim a great economy victory on a record of another year of deficit spending despite collection of .more than SBB billion from the citizens in taxes and other revenue. Goldwater didn't even swing at the fiscal year figures and, bat on shoulder, took a called strike in the first inning of his presidential campaign. Neither elections nor ball games are won that way. LBJ had every right to interpret the fiscal year end figures in his own way and to his own advantage, and that he’ did. LBJ found great comfort in these closely related facts: Huge Fiscal Deficit —The 1964 fiscal year deficit had ben estimated 18 months . ago at sll* billion and; In (January, 1964, at $lO billion whereas it proved at the end of the fiscal year, June 30, to be only $8.33 billion. Only! —Expenditure estimates had been for nearly $99 billion in fiscal ’64. The actual figure on June 30 was only $97.7. Only! A conservative-minded candidate for president would be expected to seize- the big spending, planned deficit issue offered last week by Johnson. Much of the conservative rebellion in the Republican and Democratic parties, such as it is, must b<< attributed to the big government, big spending policies of the successive administrations from FDR through DDE and JFK. Johnson has cut government spending from the heights to which the late President Kennedy projected it. But there is no promise of a balanced Johnson budget any time soon or even a beginning at a Johnson reduction of the public debt which costs more than $lO billion a year in interest. There is a limit to the debt burden which can be sustained even by the rich-rich Ameri- • eafis. But the politicians seem not to be aware of that. The Roosevelts, Trumans, Kennedys and now LBJ have spent money as though it were going out of style. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower did his part during two White House terms in one year of which he rang up an eyepopping $12.4 billion deficit. 28th Straight Deficit The shocking, shameful truth about the Treasury’s 1964 fiscal year, is that it recorded the 28th Treasury deficit since 1930. The refusal of Americans to tax themselves for boons and benefits they demand from their federal government is matched in its foolhardy blindness only by the cowardice of politicians who refuse to lay on the tages to pay for the boons »and benefits they promise to the voters in order to be elected. There, is not merely the enormous hazard of currency inflation risked by the endless deficit financing of government costs. The dollar has lost more than half its purchasing power since 1940. There is another hazard, even more deadly than inflation. It is this: If the United States now were thrown into World War 111, this great country would not be able to finance the war without building up a public debt so massive as to compel repudiation if and when the war were won. - "Die newspapers report, unexampled prosperity in the United States. In such good times we should be able to pay cash for gover ament.