Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 183, Decatur, Adams County, 4 August 1964 — Page 8

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Senate Due To Ad On Park Bill By MARGUERITE DAVIS United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Interior Committee today was scheduled to act on a long-delayed bill to create an 11,292-acre, $23 million Indiana Dunes National Park. Most signs pointed to favorable action on the administra-tion-approved measure although further compromise with opponents was a possibility. Sen. Mil ward L. Simpson, RWyo., earlier served notice he would move to’ table the bill. Indications were this motion would fail despite probable support from some Republicans including Sen. Peter H. Dominick, Colo. Chairman Henry M. Jackson, D-Wa.-h., plus seven more of the committee’s 11 Democratic members are co-sponsors flf the bill. This alone was counted an almost unbeatable combination. - The fact that Sen. Paul H. Douglas, D-111., long-time sponsor -of the national park, and Sens. Birch Bayh and Vance Hartke, Indiana Democrats, agreed the park would not interfere with the proposed deep water port at Burns Ditch, was another point in the bill’s favor. The measure’s most vulnerable points were a protest from the Inland Steel Co. and the unyielding opjxisition of House GOP Leader Charles A. Halleck,' in whose northern Indiana district both the park and port would be located. Inland complained virtually all its property in the area would bp condemned for the park, while that of two other 1 steel companies would be ex- ” eluded. At the instigation of Jacksoh, the » committee last week postponed action on the bill so it could consider the Inland telegram. Sources reported It was possible the committee would agree to exclude the 840 Inland acres, along with other non-contiguous tracts, in spite of sponsors’ Arguments that the Inland property is needed for a beach to * serve swimmers and sunbathers. Halleck has said the 2,182acre dunes state park is a vital part of the federal project, and warned that Indiana never willr surrender -its interests in the profitable state park,- Proponents argue the bill protects the state’s interests, and label this opposition a red herring. Senate approval of the bill was considered far more likely than passage by the house, where members are intent on winding up business and ad-. ‘ journing before the Democratic* National Convention starts Aug. 24. . . - o 0 Modern Etiquette I By Roberta Lee I 0 “0 Q. The members of my bridge club always put up a 50-cent fee for prizes when we play. When we have invited a substitute to play for an absent member, is it proper for the hostess to ask this guest for 50 cents? A. In this case, the hostess can either pay the substitute’s fee herself, or she can inform her when she invites her that she will be expected to ante 50 cents. Q. I've just become engaged to a young man who is about to enter military service, and our” wedding date is very indefinite. Would it still be proper for us to make public announcement of our engagement? A. Under these circumstances, yes. Q. When children are eating at the same table with adults, should they be served first, last, or in regular rotation? . * A. Serve the children in the same rotation as the adults. DRIVE-IN THEATER WED. THURS. Fkl.

Two of the Seaton's Finest Pictures—Both COLORI NOTE: “Chalk Garden” Just A A J i Finished 8 Weeks at New I « Jfcr Outrageously * York’s Radio City Music Hall IJvviwj k£.n M nl for the 4th Largest Gross in iflCOll History! RWEhL' T v ANRIREBUIWC kHMVrMgUM JV A \ S AGAINST LIFE A 4r aiMdlr woman trying to ICT RECAPTURE HERS! ms DEBORAH HAYLEY b***! Bf KNEjI! MILLS BW V i MoMK» john ■mHI < OJBkElfll w MILLS *««*»« wooucnoß«- w out Robertson, Jane Fonda / Rod Taylor, Jim Backus (jARPEN O O- ' V. ■ t ■ .. .. „■ Sat. — “Masque o( the Red Death” & “Twice Told Tales”—4Brrr! 0 O—■Cominr Sun. — “Viva Las Veras” Elvis Presley & “Blue Denim”

Twenty Leaders Attend District Roundtable Meet Approximately 20 scoutcrs from Adams, Jay and Wells counties attended the Limberlost district roundtable at Hanna - Nuttman park in Decatur Monday evening. Steve Everhart, assistant district commissioner, presided at the meeting, and passed out quarterly material, planning charts, and scouting calendars, as well as a little booklet on ideas for party uses of empty bottles. Main problem for discussion was a solution tn the "drop iiit” problem in scouting. Each year in Limberlost district alone some 350 boys are “lost" as they drop out of scouting when they grow too old for cub scouts, or regular boy scouts, and fail to advance into boy scouts or explorer scouting It was suggested that cubmast~enT~ahd scoutmasters send lists to troops and posts of ''graduating" cubs and scouts, and that explorer post leaders speak on the activities of their groups to the younger boys. U. S. Soldier Slain In Germany HANAU, Germany <UPD—A white soldier was stabbed to death and another wounded when a group of Negro soldiers attacked them on the street here Monday, a U.S. Army spokesman said today. (ierman newspapers described the early morning clash as a race riot. The Army sjxikesman said military police reports did not go into racial aspects of the incident except to note that the Negroes attacked the two white soldiers for no apparent reason." A Negro soldier suspectecL of wielding a knife in the incident was being held, the spokesman said. Names of the men involved were withheld pending notification of relatives or filing of charges. BLOOD DONATIONS (Continued from Page One) rad, Edgar .Krucckeberg, Robert ShralUku, Leo Thieme. Maxine Thieme. Paulette Thieme, Ruth Fridt, Robert Worthman. Kaye Henkle, Hollis Bonifas, Mrs. Ferris Bower, Allen Grote, James G. Pollock, Ray Seitz, Juanita Beery, Polly Botjer. Chancey Betz, Harry Massonne. Ralph Conrad, Dale Mankey, Thomas Lambert,Mrs. Stanley Arnold, Robert Plumley. Mis. Donna Watson, Harry D. Beavers, Roger Reynolds, Paul Heiser, Mrs. Wayne Bruhner,.Mrs. Marie- Journay, Janet Shaffer, Weimer F. Harmon, Joyce A. Vian, Mrs, Herman Krueckeberg, Ron Gerber, Norman Koons, Mrs. Jean Strahm, Connie Marbach, Mrs Helen Gregg, Mrs. Herman Brown, William H. Journay. Joyce Kiess, Donna Bowers, Barbara Miller, Richard Wertzberger, Eva , Brewster, George Ringger, Mrs. Frieda Bultemeier, Ralph Mankey, Victor Porter, Harvey Kowitz, Dianne Elzey, William Grant, Mrs. Richard Andrews, Richard Andri-ws. Kenneth Jackson. Marcia Stevens, Gerald J. Bauman, Rev. J. O. Pored, Charles R. Graves. Elvin L. Adkins. Richard Ziegler, Esther Selking, Albert Gillig. Ray ’ Bieberstein, Mrs. Etna M. Koenemanii, Mrs. Arnold Schumann. Jacob Tschannen, Mils. Harold Whittenbarger. Emma Lou Whittenbarger, Mrs. Belva Schnepp, Mrs. Metle Lovelette, Marie Lambert. Sheldon W. Bixler, Earl Johnson, Carl Hurst. Kathleen Deaton, Palmer Uhrick. Ferris Fox, John Frey. Robert Berry, Marilyn S. Vizard, Vernon Bleeke, Lloyd Sheets Virginia Beer, Tom Gaunt, Paul Rich. O — O I — Last Time Tonight — | "WILD AND WONDERFUL" | • Tony Curtis—ln Color | A “YOUNG AND WILLING” | O , O

ICED CROSS (Continued from Page One) baum, Marlene Stucky, Mike Habegger, Neil Habegger, Jeff Sprunger Phyllis Diehl, Karen Flickiqjir, Audrey Habegger, John Hall, Mike Fenstermaker, Ann Schindler, Steve Lyons. Because of the shortness of last season’s swimming time the following completed their tests and were issued certificates this summer. Beginner swimmers — Kathy Cox, Jeff Boze, Karen Habegger, Rosie Iz-hman, Kay Stucky, Jacalvn Miller, Gary Rich, Dan Weidler, Jerry Lee Burk. Advanced beginners — Kevin Sprunger, Neal Habegger, Berry Ixilchty, Melvin Liechty, John French, Sandy Berry, Randy Winteregg, Randv Augsburger, Mary Liechty, Esther Cox, Joe Fireoved. Intermediate swimmers — Dianne Souder, Chip Liechty, Debbie Brandt, Alan Beitler,, Carol McKean, Ronnie Nussbaum, Mike Fenstcrmaker, Kenny Herman, Tom Klrkdorffer, Scott Klrkdorffcr, Jimmy Agler. Swimmers — Ronnie Habegger, Kent Stucky, Carol McKean, Kathy Beaver, Dean Lautzenheiser, Jack Emick, Randy Beer, Gary Habegger, Ralph Fireoved, Alan Beitler, Clay Neuenschwander, Dave Affolder, Ted Moser. Junior — Steve Neuenschwander, Larry Beer, Jane Kingsley. Instructors — Timothy Roehrs, Sally Brookmeyer, Alicia Broowmeyer. FIRST MINER (Continued from Paige One) The final drilling started at 12:03 p.m. (7:03 am. EDT). Then, after another series of starts and stops, the drill pierced the chamber where the miners waited. Andre Martinet, 44-year-old • "iron man" foreman in charge of the trapped group of miners, directed the last stages of the boring from below, He - reported by telephone that the roof fell gently into the big underground cavern where the men have been trapped since July 27 without injuring anyone. Engineers predicted the first of the nine might be brought to the surface within three hours. An official announcement from rescue headquarters said "the drilling is finished. Piercing of the vault has been completed. The a point of penetration was located, at exactly the expected spot.” Immediately after the breakthrough, engineers began dismantling the big oil rig to make room for cables and winches to carry the escape capsule in which the nine will be brought to the surface. The capsule, gleaming in the hot.. sunshine like an aluminumcovered bomb, was trucked up the hillside to the shaft head about an hour before the breakthrough. Earlier, officials had said rescue appeared imminent and that the first of the trapped men might lx- coming up in a •special, bullet-shaped capsule by noon. The miners were entombed 272 feet below the surface the chalk mine inside -Mount Rivel collapsed a week ago Monday. Rescue, workers- -drilled 26® feet down, then stopped to reinforce the shaft with a steel lining. A total of 14 men disappeared when the chalk mine collapsed with a roar a week ago Monday. Nine were located alive the next day. A telephone, food, clothing and wine have been dropped to them through a thin communications tube drilled into the cavern where they were caught by the tumbling rock and earth. The five other Then inside the mine at the ■ time were two truck drivers and three more miners. There has been no definite sign of life from them, although rescuers have reported hearing faint tapping from down below that could be one or all of them. But officials said the chances for their survival was growing slim. They doubted ' the fiVe could survive so long without food or water.

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DBCATUR, INDIANA

ASCS (Continued from Page 2) ly have focused only on the commercial ills. We have concentrated almost exclusively on commodity programs. In 1961 we broadened our prospective and beban to consider the human problems of people on less than adequate farms, of communities which need to diversify their economic base, of the widespread. cancer of poverty in rural America, and of the changing needs of families and individuals in cities and suburbs for what they want from the land. "This is a three-dimensional policy, sometimes called the three C's for its recognizes that: "1. Commodity programs — are designed for the needs of commercial family farm agriculture. “2. Community Programs — are vital to the full development of opportunity in rural America. The war on poverty ... the opportunities for city families who need and seek recreation in the great outdoors .... the creation of new jobs in rural areas . . .all are part of this dimension. "3. Consumer programs — serve those who use food and fiber as well as those who produce it. The sharing of food with the needy at home and broad programs of trade and aid overseas are phases of this dimension which seek a wide avenue on which to move the abundant proSummer Enrollment Up At Fort Wayne Indiana U. Campus The summer enrollment of credit students at the Indiana University Fort Wayne Campus is up 21 per cent over that of the preceding summer. Dr. Ralph Broyles, director of the Fort Wayne Campus, said that 621 students are enrolled in credit courses this summer as compared to 511 last summer. ’ A total of 111 of these are fulltime students. During the current summer, the Fort Wayne Campus is conducting 38 different credit courses in various fields of study. The summer credit enrollment for Indiana University’s eight regional campuses and centers totals 6,789, a gain of 9.6 per cent over 1963’s summer semester. Enrollments at the University's regional campuses and center# this summer are: Northwest (Gary and East Chicago), 1,195; Indianapolis, 1,594; South Bend, 1,122; Southeastern (Jeffersonville), 816: Fort Wayne, 621; Kokomo, 524; Eastern (Richmond ), 484, and Vincennes, 33. Board Members To Receive Certificates Certificates of service will be awarded to four members of the local Selective Service board Wednesday morning, it was announced today. Col. Robert Custer, state director of the Selective Service System, will be in Decatur Wednesday to make the presentation in (he office of the local board in 11:30 a. m. ceremonies. Certificates of 15 years of service will be presented to Dr. Arthur H. Girod of Decatur and Dr. Norman E. Beaver of Berne, and 10-year certificates will go to Robert Ashbaucher of Decatur, and Donald C. Sweeney of Berne. School Board To Meet For Work On Budget The North Aaams community schools board will meet this evening in special session to finish up the budget, which will probably lie published this week, Gail F. Grabill, superintendent, said today. A noon meeting last Friday ironed out most of the budget problems, and the budget will be checked over this evening. A rate of $2.98, including the 75-cent building levy, will probably' be proposed, • Grabill said, though he feels this may be 10 cents toor' low in tuition.

ductivity of the farm into fuller use.” THE SAFETY CORNER: ACCIDENTS NEVES . TAKE A VACATION: Falla kill thousands and injure hundreds each year. They cause the most serious of household injuries. Yet safety measures can eliminate moat of them. Floors, stairways and balls must be kept free of all boxes, brooms, mops, etc. Spilled liquids should be mopped up immediately. Walking on a wet floor is as dangerous ; as walking on the ice outside. Even the finest furniture can : wear and break down. Metal burrs and splinters of wood can cause painful wounds. They should be removed from all furniture. Cuts and punctures also cause ' many of the "home” accidents. These can be doubly dangerous because* so often they go unattended. Simple cuts can easily become infected and cause blood poison. Misuse of ordinary everyday household tools is risky. Electrical outlets can be dangerous. When electrical wiring becomes frayed — replace immediately. This will prevent fires and possible injuries. DON’T LET AN ACCIDENT PREVENT YOUR VACATION. Caution and Care — The Safety Pair.

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Christmas In August r W 1 1 Maw < ™ r ~■ 1 ASV 1 HRq \ Sfi JU w-- - Ur 5, SANTA’S HELPERS? No, just a pair of Decatur Jaycees delivering the 21-inch color television which was won by Norma and Dale Bricker, route 2, Decatur, at right. John Baxter and Kenny Nash are shown delivering the set to the Brickers.—(Photo by Mac Lean) „

TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1964