The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 February 1964 — Page 4
THE DAILY BANNER
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA —
Sample Appeals For Women's Aid INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A top Hoosier spokesman for agriculture turned to the women today, for aid in mounting a fight agi^st what he termed an effort by President Johnson s administration to revive a compulsory wheat control plan rejected by farmers last year in a national referendum. Indiana Farm Bureau Vice President Glenn W. Sample, in an address today before the 34th women’s conference of the bureau here, urged them to write to Indiana's two senators this wefek to voice their views on the bilt The object of Sample’s fire w;v* a bill which calls for a plan
under which farmers who cut back 10 per cent of their acreage allotments for various crops would get a certificate worth a guaranteed price. Sample disputed claims o y backers of the certificate plan that it was voluntary. He was joined in his views by another speaker, Mrs. Guy E. Gross, Churubusco, director of the women’s division of the Indiana Farm Bureau. "Penalties for non-participa-tion would be so great that many wheat producers would have little freedom of choice,” Sample charged. ‘‘This plan still embodies a great deal of compulsion and government allocation of the market for food wheat without regard to the quality of wheat a grower produces or the use made of it.” Mrs. Gross told the some 2,000
Mliier 522, F. Partin 532, D. Saunders 517, F. Orr 528, H. Sutherlin 550, B. Langdon 530, D. Buis 509, C. Brewster 511. 200 Games: C.J. Hullan 200, N. Hoffa 220, 236, J. Headley 214, R. England 218, R. Moore 239. F. Partin 201.
TUES., FEB, 18, 1964. Page 1 damage” and psychomotor epi- was innocent on tbosc grounds, lepsy, which causes “blackouts.” Brown rejected the motion and The defense argued the 52-year- another motion that Ruby should old slayer of accused presiden- be freed on grounds of double tial assassin Lee Harvey Oswald jeopardy.
CLOVERDALE -- LITTLE 8 CONFERENCE CHAMPS Loft to right: Willard Fry. Steve Holsapple, Jerry Receveur, Hugh Patton, Gary Staley, John Cradick, Jay Gaddis, John Nees and Daryl Branneman. Center: Coach Janies Miller. Missing because of illness: Duane Collier and Rodney Hervey. Regular season rec- .
ord, 13 wins, U losses; Conference record, 6-1.
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For over 35 years, your Farm Bureau Co-op has supplied Indiana farmers top quality grass and legume seed having the highest purity and germination available... quality seed adapted to your forage needs! Follow these six simple rules when buying seed and be assured of top quality forage. • ADAPTATION-Your Indiana Farm Buroaa Co-op offtr* only *««tl known to bo adopted to this state. o WEEDS—Every bog of Co-op Seeds Is Indiana Clear Tag," meaning that it contains no restricted weed seeds as defined by the Indiana Seed Law. • PURITY—"Co-op Clean"seed Is as near perfectly clean ask Is possible to make It. • GERMINATION—Only high germinating lots ore selected for Co-op seed. • QUALITY—Size and plumpness of seed are indications of maturity and quality. • VARIETY—In buying seed, consideration should always be given to the new, improved varieties. Get good forage this year...start with clean-quality Co-op seed
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women to “look this gift horse in the mouth. We would be receiving a big part of our check written out from the government.” Sample asked for the letters because the Senate Agriculture Committee already has scheduled hearings this week on the certificate plan. “We are not going to have the chance to vote in a referendum. We must let Congress hear from the country yet this week,” he told them. He said the plan “is a sidedoor approach to the same kind of progiam the farmer turned down last year. Senators and Congressmen will he voting on whether or not to put such legislation into effect rather than farmers. Political decisions are a poor substitute for the good judgement of farmers to decide for themselves.” Sample said American farmers already had demonstrated since the May 21, 19G3 national referendum ending wheat controls that they do not need the government to "tell farmers how
much to plant, what price they should get and what penalties they should receive for not staying in bounds.”
Tigers Hope To Grab 5th Spot An opportunity to jump from last to fifth place in the Indiana Collegiate Conference presents itself to DePauw’s Tigers here tomorrow’ night. The Tigers, now' buried in the ICC basement with a 1-7 record, could vault over their guests, St. Joseph’s, with a victory in the 8 p.m. game. St. Joe currently is tied with Valparaiso at 2-8 in the
ICC.
Both the Pumas and DePauw shared the same fate last week at Evansville. St. Joe lost Saturday night 101-78; DePauw lost four nights earlier 103-78. Both look at tomorrow’s game as a chance to regain some ICC stature. Although DePauw lost at St. Joseph’s, 87-66, on Jan. 11. DePauw was down only seven. 61-
54, with about eight minutes remaining. DePauw hit a near-sea-son low r of .364 in that game while the Pumas were connecting on .543. Perhaps helpful to DePauw will be the fact that when St. Joe arrives for the 8 p.m. tipoff, the Pumas will have just tangled with the Cincinnati Bearcats. That game in Cincinnati is being played tonight. Coach Elmer McCall, w’ho for 33 minutes could visualize a smashing upset of Ball State in Bowman Saturday night, will stick with the same unit that finally lost to the Cardinals, 93-
81.
Dick Putt and Morgan Everson will start at forwards. Bob Hutto at center and Jim Callane and Bruce Osborne at guard. St. Joseph’s. 7-12 for the season. is paced by Lonnie Brunswick. a 6-3 junior fonvard from Burkettsville, Ohio.
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Travelers Win In A, A. U. Play The Greencastle Travelers defeated Stilesville Sunday at Linton in the first round of A.A.U. Sectional Competition, 118 to 111 in a hard fought contest. Stilesville led at the end of the half 47 to 45. Greencastle the first quarter 26 to 19 and at third quarter 83 to 78 but Stilesville went ahead again in the 4th quarter 93 to 91. Greencastle finally regained the lead at 103 to 96 with 3:51 left on the scoreboard as Jim Jones and Bill Strafford found the range. John Bridgeforth plaj’ed an excellant 2nd half, scoring 14 of his 22 points and picking off 18 rebounds. This Sunday February 23, Greencastle will play Linton at 3:30 p.m. in the semifinal round of the sectional at Linton. Linton defeated Vincinnes 120 to 102 to advance to next Sunday's semifinal clash with Greencftstle. Linton is (he biggest team fli the tourney and will probably be the best team Greencastle W’ill play this year. In other Tournament action Sunday, Bloomington defeated Terre Haute Hiway Market 103 to 79 and the Terre Haute Hawks defeated Spencer 96 to 85 in the afternoon sessions. Sunday Feb. 23 Semifinal Pairings. 2:00 p.m. Bloomington vs. Terre Haute. 3:30 p.m. Greencastle vs. Lin-
ton.
7:30 p.m. Championship Game. WIN TOURNEY The 17th Annual Greencastle B o w r 1 i n g Championships were completed Feb. 2, with the American Zinc team finishing in front with a score of 3060. H. Sutherlin and F. Orr w’ere the winners in (he doubles w’ith 1249. C. Alex took the singles wdth a 703. J. Sutton was high in the handicap all-events with 1968 and L. Murray won the actual all-events with 1841.
Sheinwold ^ 5 On Bridge Partnership Language Needed By Defenders By Alfred Sheinwold Defenders must use a partnership language to help them decide when to continue a suit and when to switch to a new suit. This information is conveyed by the nature of the card led or
played.
North dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH 6 J 5 3 S? K Q
0 5 3 2 * A Q J 9 6 WLar EAST A K. Q 6 4 A A 7 2 V 5 4 2 S? 7 3 074 O A QI9 8 6 A 8 4 3 2 A 10 5
SOUTH
A 10 9 8 S? A J 10 9 8 6
O K 10 A K 7
North East South West 1 4k 10 19? Pass 2 A Pass 3 9? Fass
4 9? AH Pass
Opening lead —07
West opens the seven of diamonds, and East wins with the ace. East may consider continuing diamonds, but let's suppose he switches to the deuce of spades. West wins with the queen of spades and wonders if it is safe to return a spade. Perhaps South has the ace of spades. If so, a spade return may cost a trick. This is where partnership language solves a problem. When East returns the deuce of spades (or any very low card) he promises that he can support a spade return. In general, this guarantees jack or better at the heac
of the suit.
OTHER CASES It's important to know wha> East should do in other cases. Which spade would East lead at the second trick if his spade suit were 9-7-2 instead of his actual
holding ?
East would lead the nine. A high spot-card denies the ability to support a return in the same suit. The highest spotcard you hold is usually clearest. In the actual hand, as we have seen, East returns the deuce of spades. West sees that the only missing high card is the ace (since the jack is In dummy). If East has the ace of spades, there is no danger in continuing the suit. West leads another spade, and the defenders take their three spade tricks to defeat the
contract.
If the defenders failed to take their spades, South would draw trumps and run the clubs to make his contract. Now tor a word of warning about partnership language. Don’t rely on it unless you are confident that your partner knows the language. Many an experienced player will lead a nine when he should lead a deuce, and vice versa. Show this column to your favorite partner to make sure that you both speak the same language. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one spade, and the next player bids two clubs. You hold: Spades K Q 6 4, Hearts 5 4 2, Diamonds 7 4, Clubs 8 4 3 2. What do you say V Answer: Bid two spades. This will be your only cheap chance to show’ the fine spade support. A raise in this situation should promise good trump support but just about nothing else.
PUTNAM COUNTY LEAGUE February 6, 1964
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Russells
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57
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59
600 Series: N. Hoffa 638, R.
England 601. 500 Series: Holsapple 530,
C.J. Hullan 576, R. Moore 520, W.
Attorneys Seek Directed Verdict DALLAS UPI — Defense lawyers vainly sought a directed verdict of acquittal at the start of Jack Ruby's murder trial today and then lost a bid to have jurors searched as a precaution against “the climate of Dallas.” Rejecting the defense demands. Judge Joe B. Brow'n called in a panel of 150 prospective jurors for questioning behind locked doors. He ordered 10 to return for further questioning and 100 were told to report back Tuesday morning. Fifteen women were
excused.
The defense asked Brown for a verdict of acquittal on grounds Ruby suffers “organic brain
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