The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 October 1963 — Page 5

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THE DAILY BANNER Till KS.. CH T. 10. 196S. rajfe 5 C«KEEN'CASTLE, INDIANA

Appeal For Eyes PASADENA Calif. UPI - An appeal will be issued to football fans attending a game between Los Angeles State College and Cal Poly of Pomona in the Rose Bowl this Saturday night to donate their eyes after death so that some blind persons may see. Spectators will le asked in.the

appeal sponsored by the Lions Eye Foundation of Southern California to sign a form authorizing removal of the corneas of their eyes in the event of death for transplanting to the eyes of blind persons.

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CORRAL DRIVE-IN THEATRE SEELEYVILLE, IND. Boxoffiee Open 6:45 Show at 7:15 FRIDAY & SATFRDAY “THE L.YVVLESS BREED” (Color) Rook Hudson—Hugh O'Brien Julie Adams Also “MAN OF THE WEST” (Cater) Gary Cooper—Julie London Lee J. Cobb Also '•NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS” Andy Griffith

MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE Eaat of Stilesvllle on U. S. 40

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OmauSa WASHINGTON — MARCH OF EVENTS

SENATOR BYRD SEEKS THOROUGH HEARINGS

Finance

Committee

chairman

ECONOMY ADVOCATES TAX CUT ROADBLOCK By HENRY CATHCART

Central Press Washington Writer -ty—ASTTTNT.TON—That $11 billion tax cut bill has now safely \V sailed through the perilous waters of the House and is before the Senate Finance Committee. And there, things are somewhat different than in the House Ways and Means Committee, where Chairman Wilbur Mills was sympathetic to the Kennedy administration proposal. The chairman of the Senate Committee is that redoubtable old warhorse, Harry F. Byrd, of Virginia, the upper chamber’s most persistent advocate of economy in government. There’s little doubt that the administration has the votes to force a bill onto the Senate floor, but Byrd has his prerogatives and they include holding thorough hearings with many witnesses being

asked many questions.

Byrd has made known that he will not attempt to block Senate consideration of the measure. However, he has also made it known that he wants to hear about tax cuts exhaustively, from many people representing all segments of American economic and business

life.

At present, Byrd and a small coterie of

economy advocates are the principal roadblock to enactment of the measure during this

eession. President Kennedy and his financial leaders are trying to put pressure on to obtain a final bill by Christmas—a sort of

Happy Noel for the U. S. economy.

The administration bill went to the Senate in the wake of a resounding victory in the House which refused to revise it to bar a tax cut if the President exceeded specified government spending limits. Enactment of the proviso wanild have seriously hampered final passage when the House and Senate versions are

compared to reconcile expected differences.

Even should final enactment not take place until next year, the present plan in Congress is to make the cuts effective retro-

actively as of Jan. 1, 1964.

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• CANNED SPEECHES—Michael Monroney, executive assistant to the postmaster general, and Rep. Carlton Sickles of Maryland, appeared together on a program in the congressman’s district to dedicate a new post office. When Sickles finished his address, Monroney was called to the podium. He whipped a speech out of his pocket and began to read it in t(V"‘ s of strong emphasis, gestures and all. However, and fortunately, Monroney listens to himself talking. It wasn’t long before he realized he was reciting the exact speech Sickles had just delivered. Without batting an eye, Monroney shifted away from his prepared remarks and ad-libbed a pretty good set of words about the advantages to the community of

the new facility.

The Post Office Department has a set routine for handling Inaugurations of new post offices, but in this instance something went wrong. The department had supplied Sickles and Monroney

with identical speeches.

It reminded some capital folk of an incident several years ago involving the head of a foreign state. The dignitary was scheduled to make speeches before the National Pre*ss Club and a joint session of Congress during his brief Wash-

ington visit. The Big Wig had been reading his Press Club speech for about 15 minutes when he came up short and explained to his audience that he had been reading the speech that had been prepared for him for delivery to Congress. Unabashed, he put the speech back into his pocket, reached into another pocket for tha other speech, and calmly read it through from

alart to toajl

Who's Saying What?

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