The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 September 1958 — Page 3
1
66 vards climaxed by a three- Thursday when the P&rentj yard piunpe by Halfback Dave; Teacher Association handed out Dunkelberger to give the Tig- questionnaires, with a kicker, to ers their only touchdown. J students at the Coldwater School. Chuck Colin s kick split the up- PTA authonties explained parnghts and the Old Gold led. 7-0 ents have been lax in respond-
Whittenberg rolled over De- Th:ngs were different the re- ing to questionnaires in the past.
Pauw. 41 to 7. before some 8.- ma inder of the contest as Witten000 football fans in Blarkstock took over in t he second Stadium Saturday afternoon It period an d accounted for two
Old Gold Loses Opening Contest
The kicker is expected to get
results.
IN MEMORY
“Mother”
v as the opening game of t o sea- t j g on a one-yard plunge by The PTA told the students if son for the Tigers and the us- p> on Murphy and an 85-yard they bring back the questionual crowd of fans was aug- jetum of a punt by Ron Lan- naires, properly filled in by their mented by 5,7000 Methodist t a s ter and it was 14-7 at half- parents, they will be rewarded young people from over the time with lollipops—all flavors,
state who were the guests of A touchdown and a 13-yard the university. field goal sent the visiting Ohio DePauw looked good the first aggregation's count to 25-7 at the quarter, driving down field for end of the third frame.
Two more t.d.s. in the final I
quarter resulted in the 4-7 vie- ■ memory of Thelma Brown, tory by Wittenberg. | wh <> passed away four years ago
The Tigers showed flashes of today, good football at times and the
DePauw line should be tough ! There s a bright star shining in
before many more tilts have been j heaven,
played. i We seem to see your smile. It was speed and experience j We are thankful that God gave
us
People 60 to 80
TEAMSTERS UNION IS CORRIPT SAYS COUNSEL WASHINGTON <UPI) — The chief counsel of the Senate Plackets Committee says “corruption is so ingrained" in the Teamsters Union that courts should take it over and fire its “corrupt officials” including President James R. Hoffa. Counsel Robert F. Kennedy said Teamster leaders had “corrupted” judges, prosecutors and even members of Congress— "There is no question about it.” He refused to name any congressmen involved, but he said the committee had investigated such cases.
Two pros and two amateurs tied for the top spot in the third annual Plymouth Golf Open Sunday with one-over par 71s. Leading the pros were host Marc Rankin and Arnold Koehler of Greencastle. John Jamiron. Hobart, and Dr. Wendell Aldrich, Angola, led the amateurs. Rankin and Koehler finished one hole of a play-off in par, before darkness stopped the battle for top money. They divided S400.
"Bushville” still goes zany when the Milwaukee Braves win a pennant. A throng of 20,000 was at Gen. Mitchell Airport Sunday night when the Braves returned home from Cincinnati where a few hours before they had won their second straight National League pennant with a 6-5 victory’ over the Redlegs. Downtown, horns honked, hawkers squawked and college students danced in the street far into the night.
TIE FOR TOP SPOT PLYMOUTH, Ind. (UPI) —
BUSHV ILLE” TURNS OUT TO WELCOME BRAVES I MILWAUKEE (UPI) — By New York Yankee standards, the people here are still as "bush league” as ever.
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EFFECT ON OPINION ?
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This southern Michigan city of 9,000 may be able to answer that
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Such a wonderful Mother for awhile. So when our hearts ache with sorrow We gaze into the sky and find The brightest one that’s shining. It’s you, Mother, who was so dear and kind. Sadly missed by the Children.
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BROTHER KILLS SISTER RENSSELAER. Ind. (UPI) — An 11-year-old boy was blamed today for the death of his 13-j’ear-old sister, because he wanted to “hear the gun click.” Frieda Mae Wireman of Rensselaer died Sunday.
ANNIVERSARIES Birthday* Cathy Lynn Stone. 3 years old September 21, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gareld Stone. Bobby Wayne Fenwick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harding Fenwick, 7 years old. Sept. 22.
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OHIO COLUMNIST DIES CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPII — John W. Love, 66, business columnist of the Cleveland Press died Sunday night when his car went out of control and smashed into a tr.3e. Love had been at his job since 1931.
SEE MARGARET PER FOR VI CHICAGO (UPI) — Former President Harry S. Truman an his wife, Bess, saw their daughter Margaret performing in i plaj’ for the first time Sunday night when they attended the Di'Urj’ Lan.? Theater where she has the lead role in "Autumn Crocus.” Although Chicago critics pan ned the play and were only hike warm about the performance of Mrs. Margaret Truman Daniel Truman proudly said ho taoirjh t was “wonderful.''
LITTLE ROCK. Ark (UPDTelevision integrated the high school students of Little Rock after a fashion today. Fifteen white teachers taught 3,4)80 students, white and negro, by television in an emergency program to keep the time the high schools are closed in an integration crisis from being a complete waste. Negro teachers were not used in the TV project.
THE DAILY BA
MON., SEPT. 22. 1958. Page S ORF.KNi ^n.E. (No
shaft at the Nevada Test Site, 75 miles north of here at Yucca Flats, in the their safety experiment conducted m conjunction with the current series of Atests. Scientists and newsmen were about 2'2 miles away when the device was exploded in a shaft three-feet in diameter, bored into the floor of the desert.
GOOD HUNTING AIJ, 'ROUND
MADISON, Wis. UPI — Bow ind arrow deer hunting season opened in Wisconsin Sundaj’ and hunters did very well, bagging 192 deer. Game wardens did almost as well, marking the season’s start .vith 71 arrests of hunters, all barged with hunting in a closed area and trespassing.
ADMITS NEWSMEU
LAS VEGAS, Nev. UPI—The Atomic Energy Commission Sun- 1 day permitted newsmen to wit- 1 ness for the first time one of its : experienments to assure the safety of nuclear weapons from ac■idental denotation. An atomic device was detonat- ! ed at the bottom of a 5 0-fcot 1
MATRICIDE CHARGED — James D. Rutledge, 32, ex-convict, arrives handcuffed in Canton, O., to face a charge of strangling his mother, Mrs. James Rutledge, 58. She was killed Aug. 25.
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BEHIND IT—Singer Eddie Fisher grins as he holds an eight-ball, presented to him at the Los Angeles Press club as he made his first public appearance since split with Detibie Reynolds.
In what may be the nation's last series of atomic tests before an international b'n on such expeiiments, a “baby” nuclear device explodes over A'ucca F.ats. Nevada atomic test site. At the left the device, of less than one kiloton power, explodes below a balloon 500 feet from the ground. The right picture shows the comparatively small mushroom. Pictures were taken from a distance of ten miles.
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TWO DEFENDERS—Ready for action on Formosa are these two defenders, Capt. Shiu Tin Pao of the Chinese Nationalist an force, and a Matador missile from the United States.
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WARSAW UNCONCERTO — U. S. Ambassador Jacob Beam (top middle) and Red China Ambassador Wang Ning-pan (bottom middle) are hard at it In Warsaw, Poland, trying to tuid a solution to the Formosa situation. (Radiophotos)
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'IN THERE FIGHTING'—United Steelworkers’ President David J. McDonald, 55, interjects a remark as “rebel” delegate Donald C. Ftarick, 38, attempts to get McDonald’s powers curbed at the convention microphone in Atlantic City, N. J. Said Rarick, “If the President (of the U. S.) were allowed to appoint his Congress and his Senate—in five years we would have a dictatorship.” Delegates howled him down, hut he said he would be “in there fighting” later.
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Political Pros Cautious
^ In View of Past Events
By HENRY CATHCAKT
Central Press Association Washington "Writer 'TIT’TASHINGTON'—Sweeping Democratic victories in the Maine ?V elections were received with public jubilation by the donkey party and frank expressions of disappointment and dismay by
Republicans.
However, privately, the Democrats are not quite so happy. The political pros know on the basis of bitter experience that it Isn’t
good to have too strong a political tide running for j'ou too early in a campaign. Take the Truman-Dewey campaign In 1943. Everything—polls, experts and common sensepointed to a Dewey victory but Truman came up strong and undetected in the closing days of the campaign and nipped the Republican presidential candidate at the wire. The same situation has repeated itself at national, state and local levels many times in the past. And there are some signs that it could happen again. In California, where Senator William F. Knowland was running well behind his Democratic opponent for the governorship, he is now reported ‘‘pulling up, though still behind.” In Arizona Senator Barry Coldwater, seeking re-election to the upper house on the GOP ticket, was originally reported behind, but is now seen as making a good showing with a better than 50-50 f hance of pulling through. In New York, Democratic Gov. Averell Harriman was reported well ahead in his bid for reelection, but now Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller is seen gaining on him. So it goes. Anything can happen in politics. However, these Specific situations not-withstanding, Washington observers still believe the Democrats will emerge from November’s elections still in control of the Senate and the House.
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Shortly before answering Sov.et Premier Khrushchev’s late t For mosa note President ana Mrs. Eisenhower watch the America’* Ou •ace tiom the deck of the U3S Mitscher at Newport, R. L Later, the President denounced the Kremlin’s tough 13-page letter abusive and intemperate and sent it hack to Moscow.
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• VACATIONS UPSET—The vacation season for Washington government officials has been shattered again this j'ear by a number Of unpredictable developments in foreign and domestic affairs. Last j’ear at this time government officials from President Eisenhower on down went through the same thing, and on some of th® same issues, too. To Washington newsmen and f- leral officials, it seems as though time has been rolled back a j’ear. First and foremost, of course, is the war-threatening crisis In the Formosa straits. The Red Chinese military attack on Quemoy has caused the President to interrupt his vacation twice within a week. It appears at this writing that the sharply increasing tensions there will provide Ike with some more headaches before iff
all over with, one way or the other.
Then there is the integration situation. This is almost an exact re-play of a j’ear ago, even to the Newport, R. I., datelines and the now familiar name of Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus. If anj-thing. the integration fight in some of the southern states
is worse this J’ear than last.
Nonr.allj', this is the time of J’ear, after Congress has qulf. for the annual exodus from Washington. True, many of(:< ials of Cabinet rank have left but they have not gone far and sort of maintain a shuttle operation between their vacation retreats and their
offices.
To the private distress of many. It is reminiscent of wartime Washington, when a government appointment really meant a 12* aionug»-*-yuLr job.
Event*
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