The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 May 1964 — Page 3

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THE DAILY BANNER

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1964 Page 3

Ike's Son Named Foundation Veep VALLEY FORGE, Pa. UPI —John S. D. Eisenhower, son of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, has been appointed executive vice president of Freedoms Foundation, it was announced today. Dr. Kenneth D. Wells, presi-

dent of tiie foundation, said its growth had made enlargement of the staff necessary. Eisenhower retired from the Army as a Lt. Col. He currently is engaged in editing volume two of “The WTiite House Years” oy his father which will be published by Doubleday and Co. Eisenhower and his family will live In this area.

Wake Up

376 ACRE FARM

Buy New — Put in crop and get all of 320 acres of corn. This is continuous corn land and part of it made 160 Bu. per acre last

year.

Two mod. homes and tenant house, all of tillable land can be in four fields. Price $346.00 per acre on contract. $40,000.00 dn. and $3,000.00 per year. This fari|i could produce between 40,000 and 50,000 Bu. of corn this year. 5TUDY YOUR LE550N. Possession now. PARKER REAL ESTATE REALTORS - INSURANCE - FARM LOANS Phone Stilesville 845-2215

Congratulations to Class of 1964

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HOUSE PARTY HEADS ALSO SEE INCREASE

By HEXRY CATHCART Central Press Washington Writer TrrASHIXGTON—A measure of the growing political strength W of President Lyndon B. Johnson can be found in the greatly optimistic expectations of Democratic Senate and House

managers.

Six months ago Senate Democratic leaders privately feared that the 1964 elections would cause them to lose seven or eight

seats from their present 67-to-33 majority. Today they are talking bravely of actually in-

creasing their top-heavy majority.

House Democrats believed a few short months ago that they could easily lose some of their 259-to-176 advantage, and at best hold what they had and perhaps pick up a seat or two. Now they look forward to a sub-

stantial increase in their majority.

In the words of one politically astute Democratic senator: “We have two things going for us—Lyndon B. Johnson and the big na-

tional schism in the Republican Party.”

However, the really big thing "going” for them is Johnson, for if the GOP thought it had a 50-50 chance or better for the presi-

dency, that schism wouldn’t exist.

• A MARK OF TRUE FRIENDSHIP—Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota is the floor manager of the civil rights bill, “debate” on which is now well into its second month on the Senate floor. Humphrey is also one of the leading aspirants to be the vice presidential candidate on the Democratic ticket. In his role as manager of the Senate forces that favor the bill, Humphrey tangles daily with his Southern Democratic colleagues who axe conducting a filibuster to prevent its passage. One recent day Humphrey got into a spirited debate with Sen. A. Willis Robertson of Virginia, a die-hard believer in segregation. At the conclusion of the exchange, Robertson turned to his political colleague and legislative opponent and remarked: “A newspaperman who was writing an article about the senator from Minnesota asked me about how the senator from Minnesota would xun for second place in Virginia. I said, ‘Better

than some.’”

Humphrey broke into a broad grin and strode over to shake hands with Robertson. “With that, I have no more questions to ask the senator,” said the pleased man from Minnesota.

* * • •

# SPEED TRAPS—Metropolitan Washington, like many other large population centers around the country, has radar-equipped police cars to assist in catching unwary speeders. And the police department is annoyed, to put it mildly, because some Washington radio stations are broadcasting the locations of the radar cars as a warning to radio-equipped auto drivers. The department has complained to the Federad Communications Commission of the practice. Here’s how it works: Some Washington radio stations encourage motorists who spot the radar cars to phone in and report their location when they get to their destination. Several of the radio stations have gone to the length of having a special telephone num-

ber for the informers.

One radio station says that if the object of the radar cars is to discourage speeding, it is performing a public service by warning the motoring public that they’re out and waiting.

The cops think differently. They believe that when motorists learn a radar car is on one highway, drivers drive carefully there

but speed freely on others.

Streets Patrolled By Guardsmen CAMBRIDGE, Md. UPI — The threat of more Negro demonstrations hung over this racially tense Eastern Shore community today although the ! steel-helmeted National Guards^men patrolled the city’s streets | to enforce a ban on such protests. Guardsmen, bayonets at the ready, threatened to use tear gas Tuesday night to quell the second street demonstration in two days by about 150 singing, chanting Negroes. The crowd dispersed without incident. Thirteen integration leaden, including Mrs. Gloria Richardson, chairman of the Cambridge Non-Violent Action Committee, were to appear before magistrate’s court here on disorderly conduct charges. The 13 have been held in custody under "civil arrest” at the Pikesville Armory, near Baltimore, since Monday night. Tne guard used tear gas to break up a wild brick-throwing demonstration by about 200 Negroes staging a “freedom day” rally in oppositiqn to a rally for Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. Cambridge has been under “militia iaw,” a form of limited martial law, since the bloody riots of last summer.

1,398 new cases of German measles, compared with 582 the previous week and 732 cases of rubeola — ordinary measles — compared with 368 the last preceding week. The German measles raised the year’s incidence to 9,321 compared with 1,213 a year ago, and the rubeola cases to 7,521, compared with 2,906 a year ago.

Rabbi Criticizes Bi$hop Sheen WASHINGTON UPI — A Jewish theologian said today that Roman Catholic Bishop Fulton J Sheen ought to return to his seminary and learn the true meaning of prayer. Rabbi Maurice N. Eisendrath criticized as “hypocrisy” a suggestion by Sheen that public

school children be allowed to say as a prayer the phrase: “In God we trust." Eisendrath testified today against amending the Constitution to allow prayer in the public schools. He appeared during hearings of the House Judiciary Committee. “Let us not indulge in hypocrisy,” Eisendrath said, “by pre- ! tending, as even a distinguished clergyman has done in testimony to this committee, that 1 invocation of the phrase Tn God we trust’ would advance either religion or morality. “To oelieve that is to yield to magic and superstitition.”

today there is still “a lot of work to to be done” before a compromise package of amendments to the Senate’s civil rights bill can be worked out in final form. Kennedy conferred with both Republican and Democratic pro-civil rights strategists of the Senate as Southern opponents continued to talk against the bill, virtually daring the Senate to try to invoke cloture. The attorney general told newsmen there was “general agreement on principles” but that differences on the precise wording of amendments were unsettled.

Work Is Needed On Civil Rights

PROMOTION

Many Measles Cases Reported INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A wave of measles cases continued to roll over Indiana last week, according to statistics is- j I sued by the State Board of j Health. 1 The board received reports of

HOLLYWOOD UPI — Comedian Jess White moves from television commercials to a fea-

WASHINGTON UPI -Atty. ; tured role ° pp0site Shell y Win - Gen. Robert F. Kennedy sai V ters and Robert Taylor.

LIZLIKE Monica Lund, 24, lounges poolside in Las Vegas, Nev., resting up from gyrating in Folies Bergere. The 36^-23-36 “double” is from Stockholm.

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