Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 21 August 1964 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Geneva Students On CROP Tour

Nine Geneva high school students, representing the youth fellowship which won the state-wide “Pop for CROP” contest by raising $232.66 selling 20 pounds of popped pop corn and donating the receipts to the Cliristian Rural Overseas Program, to help starving, helpless people the world over, Thursday toured the national CROP office in Elkhart, the church world serviceLu heran world relief-Mennonite central committee clothing center at Nappanee, and the Zook friendship farm near Goshen as first prize in the CROP contest. The Rev. Robert Miller, new pastor of the Geneva EUB church, the Rev. Gerald L. Wilson, state director of CROP, and Dick Heller, county CROP publicity director, accompanied the group on the 300-mile tour. Rev. Miller and Heller drove. Project in April In April, under the direction of their pastor, the Rev. Armour Keller, who has since been transferred to the Jefferson EUB church, near Frankfort, the 19member youth fellowship received 24 pounds of popcorn from the state CROP office to start the

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project. They used newspaper and radio publicity, and went door-to-door through Geneva. Rev. Keller has served several years as secretary of the state CROP committee. He was well aware of the need for the CROP program. The G.eneva EUB church, through a series of programs, became more familiar with the worldwide work of church world service, which combines the resources of nearly 100 vaious national denominational bodies, Including most Protestant groups, and furnishes aid to the needy abroad. Others Help, Too The youth group studied how many of the countries, such as Germany, helped by the U.S. churches after the Second World War, are now helping other countries in a far larger proportion than the much richer US chuches. lij response to the Christian challenge to help others, CROP, the Christian rural overseas program, furnished surplus food in huge quantities abroad, each dollar raised in the U. S. furnished many times that amount in aid abroad. This food — wheat flour, corn syrup, corn meal, rice, etc. —is distributed only through Christian agencies, so that the maximum amount gets directly to the hungry people who need it most, on a ration card basis. It Is not just given to the foreign government, where dishonest officials might divert it for sale for their own greedy purposes. Those Making Tour The nine young people making the tour of national CROP headquarters and the other CWS projects were: Steve Mosser, Geneva sophoSUN. & MON. Box Office Opens 7:15 First Show at Dusk 75c—Children Under 12 Free

more, son of Mr. and Mrs.. Arden Mosser; Terry Nevil, Geneva junior, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Nevil; Neil McGough, Geneva freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd McGough; Robert Zimmerman, sophomore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Zimmerman; Miss Toni Mosser, junior, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mosser; Miss Carol Mosser, freshman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mosser; Miss Virginia Rhodehamel, Geneva senior, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rhodehamel; Miss Shelly Workinger, Geneva senior, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Les Workinger; and Miss Linda Mosser, eighth grade, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mosser. Others on Project Those who also worked on the project, but were unable to make the Elkhart trip, were Ron Vorhees, Geneva senior, son of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Vorhees; George Cott, sophomre, son of Mr. and Mrs. Al Cott; Miss Cindy Wilhoite, Geneva freshman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Willolte; Miss Cathy Anderson, sophomore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Anderson; Miss Donna Fosnaugh, Geneva graduate who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Fosnaugh; Carl Zimmerman, Cincinnati university freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Zimmerman; Tom Hart, junior, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hart; Billy Garringer, freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Garringer; Stanley Va nEmon, freshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Van Emon, and Miss Janet Rhodehnmel. eighth grade, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Rhodehamel. Chicken Dinner The group made the hundredmile trip to Elkhart Thursday morning, leaving Geneva about 9 o'clock and arriving at the CROP headquarters in downtown Elkhart about 11:30 a.m., just in time for lunch. Albert Farmer, national director of CROP, greeted the group on Its arrival, and took them into the CROP office, where a chicken dinner box lunch had been prepared for the group and the staff members. Following dinner. Farmer introduced the staff members to the group, and gave a little rundown on their functions. The office operates quite a printing concern, all by the cold-type, offset process, printing hundreds of thousands of copies of various publications. Nearly 5,000 copies of the CROP news are distributed in Indiana alone See Printing Operation Then the group tourned the printing plant. First they saw how a tvpewriter-llke machine reduces copy to tapes, with each letter showing as a coded punched dot series. This tape, in turn, runs another machine that looks like n typewriter, but is a justiwrlter. The second machine prints the tones back again in the size type for which <t is set, but the lines are "justified" — that is, the right margin is just as straight

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as the left margin, like a* printed line. The justified columns are then pasted up, and photographed, and the new photograph of a page is then exposed to a film, which in turn is impressed on lightsensitive metal. Where the mental is sensitized, ink will be picked up; where it is insensitive, no ink will show. This plate is good for hundreds of thousands of impressions, and the offset press, as this process is called, operates very fast. See Arab Program The group then saw slide strip which showed the work that church world service is doing with Arab refugees from Israel. The Nappanee clothing center was then toured. Although it is a headquarters for three different groups — church world service, Lutheran world relief, and Mennonite central committee — it is operated by a non-member group, the church of the Brethren! The Brethren people operate it as a sign of their interest in the ecumenical movement, and their cooperation with other denominations. Older people, and many conscientious objectors, working their two-year period, operate the center. • In Eight States The center operates trucks in pa*-ts of eight midwestem states, picking up clothes, blankets, soap.

Sl CBOR IM fl - ill fl" I :K Jl||Edflfl UK -« • wKBKHBPHKBfI »*' • tK■ ■JH CROP AND UNITED CLOTHING APPEAL work is shown to Geneva youths in the day-long tour of the national CROP headquarters in Elkhart. Pictured above, from left to right, are Terry Nevil, Steve Mosser, the Rev. Robert Miller, Neil McGough, and Robert Zimmerman, all of the Geneva EUB youth fellowship which won the state "Pop for CROP” contest. il | fHKsI ■ .'.i; ‘ ■J ■ • wM a? - - st ■ ■ flfl ■. REV. AtHtiRT FARMER center, CROP national directory explainls softie-of his problems in dealing with more than two dozen national ch|jrch.orgahii>tions, to Mlss Shirley Workinger, left, and Ned McGoiirfh, right; of the Geneva EUB church ybuth fellowship MITJUmik. - "* -W!?' “■ - IT*'' I"** •’ ‘""’R-T ’ "• •£, --r-inp.-r-*-’ r Nflt ! * ■■PS i -<fl| . "■ —— - 1 fl flfci I Hfl flflflflfllfl iKflfllflflßnL a. flflflflß VISIT FRIENDSHIP FARM with Marvin Mishler, right, Elkhart county farmer, the Geneva state “Pop tor CROP" winners learn how Christian farmers pitch in and share-crop a farm, giving their share to (JROP to help the unfortunate. abroad. • . GENEVA YOUTH GROUP pauses in front of the national CROP headquarters in Elkhart above. They are front row, from left to right, Terry Nevil Neil McGough. Carol Mosser. and Linda Mosser; center row. Rev. Gerald Wilson, Indiana CROP director, Virginia Rhodehamel, and Shelly Workinger; back row. Toni Mosser. Robert Zimmerman. Steve Mosser, and the Rev. Robert Mosser, pastor of the Geneva EUB church. This is part of the 19-person youth fellowship which won the state “Pop for CROP" contest this spring ~ ~ -

etc., urgently needed abroad. At Nappanee it is cleaned, processed, and packed for shipment abroad. Each year more than one million pounds enough to fill nearly 50 semi-trucks —of clothing alone! The group watched the baling of the clothing in 90-pound bales, after the separating and cleaning process. They saw the warehouse of baled clothing ready for shipment. The clothing is divided Into different types, for cold, cool, or hot areas. Different types of things are nedeed by different types of groups, and each is broken down into men’s women’s children’s, and infants’ packages. The office map showed the group just where clothing pickups are made, Decatur and Portland being the nearest center to them. This past year CROP state directors and committees were given the added clothing task by church world service. Visit CROP Farms Art a final bonus, the young men and women visited the farm of state friendship acres chairman Marvin Mishler, who lives near Elkhart, and then visited the Elias Zook farm, a .friendship farm. Zook, who formerly resided in Berne, has given over a large portion of his acreage, and a group of civic-minded farmers get together and farm it, giving the money earned to CROP. Many groups throughout the state, in eluding several in Wells county.

— — ■ flkflv I ■ ..EH I MAX HOBBB, DECATUR native and candidate fbr congress, speaks tq the more than 300 persons who crowded the inside of the barn, and filled the barnyard outside during the 1964 Democratic ice cream social at the Peter Spangler farm, Kirkland township, Thursday night. Miss Rosemary Spangler, candidate for reelection as county recorder, was hostess for the affair, and was assisted by committees of some 100 fellow Democrats. (Photo by Mac Lean)

share - crop the farms, and give their share to CROP. Friendship acres are individual acres donated by- individual farmers to the CROP program. On the return trip, the group ate supper in Fort Wayne, and thanked Rev. Wilson for the interesting tour of the national CROP office and other places of interest in the Elkhart area. After the all-siay tour, a spokesman for the group said they hope to do twice as well next year. Full Distribution Os School Funds INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—For the first time in more than a year, the Indiana Board of Finance Thursday authorized a full quarterly distribution of state funds to local schools. This distribution totals $40,287,393. This marks the first time that the general fund surplus was high enough to permit payment Trailer Sales Cops Victory In State ISC Adams County Trailer Sales, behind the shutout hurling of righthander Erv Graft, whipped Heller Stone of Markle Thursday night in the state ISC tournament at Markle. Graft whiffed 16 batters as his club backed him with plenty of runs in an 8-0 victory. Trailer Sales, which has one loss in the double-elimination affair, will play the team that beat them Wednesday, Albion - Cromwell, in the,first game tonight. If victorious in "that game, they will play a second contest tonight against Monty’s Restaurant of Fort Wayne. No details of the game last night were given the Daily Democrat. Two Cars Damaged In Wreck Thursday Two autos were damaged shortly before noon Thursday in an accident at the intersection of Jackson and Ninth strets. Autos operated by Jack A. Stauffer, 17, of 303 N. Four’h St., and Thomas Engle 17, of 231 N. 11th St., collided in the intersection. Stauffer was westbound on Jackson and struck the left rear of the Engle auto, which was northbound on Ninth. The intersection is unmarked and neither driver saw the other auo until the crash occurred. Damages were estimated at $175 to Stauffer’s auto and $125 to the Engle vehicle. Champion 4-H Steer On Television Show Phil Bentz, of Berne, Adams county 4-H’er who owned and showed the grand champion 4-H steer at the county 4-H fair this July, and Herman H. Krueckeber, executive vice president of the First State Bank, which purchased the animal, together wi’h Ernest Lesluk, Adams county agent, will be heard with Wayne Rothgeb over WKJG-TV, channel 21, at 5 pm. Saturday in a 15-minute show. The three are entering the Adams county champion steer in the “Champion of Champions" television contest, and they recorded the show Thursday evening at the WKJG studio in Fort Wayne. Each county in northeastern Indiana had an opportunity to enter their champion steer in the program. Wayne Rothgeb, WKJG farm director, promoted the show. The judge for this event will be Kenpeth McDonald, extension beef specialist, Purdue university. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Demoent Want ads — They get BIG results.

of the three-month allocation at one time since the April-June payment last year. Since then, the quarterly payments had been sliced into eighths so as not to exhaust the cash on hand. This payment is tor the JulySeptember quarter and includes $37,279,260 of tuition funds and $3,008,133 so r- transportationcosts. The balance of the 1964-65 ■ appropriation now stands at $98.8 million for tuition and $6.3 million for transportation. Governor Welsh, chairman of the Board of Finance, jubilantly commented on the “solvency" of the state and invited the two Republican members — State Auditor Dorothy Gardner and Deputy Tr easurer William Owen, sitting in for ailing Treasurer Robert Hughes—to accompany him to the national Democratic convention. Mrs. Gardner « indicated that she intends to stay at home and watch the Democratic gathering by television.

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1964

Two Drivers Have Licenses Suspended Two drivers, one from Decatur and the other from Geneva, have had their driving privileges suspended due to convictions of driving while under the influence, according to the latest driver suspension list issued by the state bureau of motor vehicles. Rex Gene Werst, of 408 N. Second St., received a two-months suspension, from July 22 to September 22, of this year, while Harrison L. Fennig was handed a suspension of six months, from July 27 of this year to Janauary 27 of next year. New York Stock Exchange Price MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T. 70%, Du Pont 262, Ford 51%, General Electric 83%, General Motors 93%, Gulf Oil 56%, Standard Oil Ind. 81, Standard Oil N.J. 86%, U.S. Steel 57%..