The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 February 1965 — Page 4
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4 Th* Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana Thurcday, Pabruary 11, 1965 Republican Party Far From Dead Declares Congressman Roudebush
FRANKFORT, Ind. — Sixth District Congressman Richard L. Roudebush (R-Ind.), of Noble.'Ville, declared here Tuesday that the ‘Republican Party is far from dead.” “To paraphrase a famous political observer, recent reports about the death of the Republican Party have been greatly exaggerated,'’ Roudebush commented. Speaking before the annual Clinton County Republican j Lincoln Day dinner-meeting, i Congressman Roudebush con-! tinued. ‘‘'The very intensity of the debate among Republicans about our Party’s future is convincing evidence that the Grand Old Party is alive and kicking.” “The question preoccupying all of us — Where do we go from here — and how do we
get there?”
“I wish to suggest two steps. First, let us keep in mind that the differences between Republicans today are not one fraction as great as the common interests which bind us together as a party. Secondly, we must build a stronger Party on the basis of our common interests, not our differences.” “It will not be easy, but nothing worthwhile ever is.” Roudebush said that Republi-
cans, rather than replaying last Fall’s election defeat, should direct their attention to the shortcomings and errors of the
administration.
Among these he cited crippling stril^es, disrespect for law and or^er; mounting crime in the streets and the deterioation of American morals and family life; pampering of the criminal element; a critical drain on American gold and the increasing uneasiness about our monetary backing; greater national debt; the war in Vietnam “where Americans are dying in a war the administration refuses to call a war and will not commit itself to winning; “the largest spending budget in U. S. history; "a spineless reaction in the face of threats, hate and arrogance from foreign dictators who take our aid with one hand and slap our face with the other;” closing down of veterans hospitals in the U. S. to save $25 million, while Nasser of Egypt and Sukarno of Indonesia — and outright communist regimes — receive many times this amount in foreign aid, and “frozen immobility and silence while Russia continues to build submarine bases and other military instal-
lations in Cuba.”
MM YOUR HEALTH.
By LESTER L. COLEMAN, M.D.
Heat Mask Helps Heart Patients
Kansas Braces For New Storm By United Brest International A giant snowstorm lumbered down from the central Rockies today and sprawled across the Great Plains. Blizzard warnings were posted in Kansas. Freezing rain and drizzle moved out ahead of the storm and thunderstorms dumped heavy rain on the South. The Weather Bureau was Issuing periodic bulletins on the storm’s
progress.
Snow drifts piled three feet deep west of Denver, Colo., where three inches of fresh snow fell during the night. Other parts of the state were socked with up to a foot of new snow and driving was hazardous throughout Colorado and
Wyoming.
Stockmen's warnings were hoisted for central Nebraska and western Kansas. Hazardous driving warnings were extended into New Mexico. At least 10 persons died in weather - related accidents Wednesday. Rising temperatures, rain and melting ice flooded homes
and roads in the Detroit, Mich., area. The temperature hit 52 degrees in the motor city Wednesday, breaking a 32 year record for the date.
Ead Search For Missiug Officer WASHINGTON UPI — The search operations have been called off for Lt. Edward A. Dickson of Wyoming, Pa., whose plane was shot down in the U.S. attack on North Viet Nam Sunday, the Defense Department said today. Dickson is still missing. His plane was crippled by Communist groundfire in the raid on Dong Hoi, but he flew part way back to his carrier base and was seen to parachute into the
sea.
Dickson was pilot of the only ; Navy jet lost in the 49-plane attack. Eight other planes were damaged.
PATIENTS with chronic heart disease or anginal pain are known to suffer a moderate amount of additional discomfort in cold, windy weather. When walking against the wind, a great deal of energy is consumed. This places an extra burden on the heart, and taxes its reserve strength. Patients who have chronic lung conditions, like asthma, emphysema, bronchitis and bronchiectasis are also distressed Dr. Coleman by brisk, windy
weather.
Sometimes the elderly, too, have a sense of special exertion and fatigue in exceedingly cold weather, without any unusual heart or lung condition. Winds Are Distressing Patients in middle age who have recently recovered from a coronary heart attack find that blustery winds are as distressing as physical exertion. For these patients, a simple device was created by Dr. Louis A. Terman of Chicago, 111. In the Illinois Medical Journal. Dr. Terman described a special heat mask which alleviates distress and provides protection and comfort against the winter wind. A simple battery - powered heating device preheats the cold air before it is inhaled. Thus warm, comfortable air replaces the harsh, irritating cold that so often incapacitates and limits the activity of many people/ Mask Provoked Interest When the mask was described last year, there was an overwhelming interest be<>iuse of the frequency with w&ich cold air is a source of distress. A scientific study showed that many patients could carry on normal daily activities, regardless of the weather, when they wore the protective mask. Even perfectly healthy people
who are engaged in outdoor work or sports benefited from the comfort offered by this simple preheating device. The normal exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide is in no way disturbed by wearing the mask over the nose and mouth. Some Types Unheated There are also some types of masks without a battery heating unit. These, too, serve an excellent purpose as a protection against the sharp bite of cold air, especially after having been confined indoors for a number of hours. It is interesting to note that many people lose their sensitivity about wearing a mask in public. The comfort is so great that adult and mature people overcome any first feelings of embarrassment. Masks are now so commonly worn that their advantages should not be sacrificed by temporary self-con-sciousness about appearance.
• • •
READERS' RELATED QUESTIONS Why do people with angina sometimes have pain over the heart after eating? When the stomach is overloaded, more blood is brought to the stomach to aid in digestion. In many instances, the heart muscle must work harder to pump the additional blood to the stomach. At the same time, the coronary arteries, which bring blood to the heart muscle itself, receive a decreased blood supply. An overloaded stomach, unusual exercise, walking against the wind in cold weather produce angpnal pains by the same kind of effect on the blood supply to the heart. These columns are designed to relieve your fears about health through a better understanding of your mind and body. All the hope ft* new advances in medicine reported here are known to doetore everywhere. Your individual medical problems should be handled by your own doctor. He knows you best.
Seaate Group Plaas Heariags WASHINGTON UPI — A Senate subcommittee has scheduled hearings for next month on a move aimed at altering the Supreme Court’s oneman, one-vote formula for apportioning state legislatures. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., announced that hearings would be held by his subcommittee on proposals for amending the Constitution to limit federal court authority in apportionment matters. In the House, meanwhile, a subcommitte approved legislation aimed at setting strict federal standards on the makeup of congressional districts.
his top military and diplomatic advisers today on the deepening crisis in South Viet Nam. The President summoned an emergency meeting of the National Security Council Wednesday shortly after receiving word of Tuesday night’s terrorist attack on the U. S. Army barracks in South Vietnamese coastal town of Qui Nhon. Then, in the early hours of
Johnson Meets With Advisers
WASHINGTON UPI —President Johnson was to meet with'
VALENTINE DANCE GREENCASTLE ELKS CLUB Sat, Feb. 13 10 p.m.-1 a.m. MUSIC BY John Wood Combo For Elks and their Ladies
this morning, came reports ol an attempted Communist amphibious assault on Qui Nhon, apparently beaten back by American and South Vietnamese troops. After the Security Council meeting Wednesday, White House Press Secretary George
E. Reedy would say only that “the *tuatidn is receiving the closest • attention.” The President himseLf walked through the White House press lobby shortly afterward to take a walk around the grounds of the executive mansion. He, too, would make no comment.
Indiana University presents
New Yorit Ofy BeBet Ballet Masters: GeorgA Baiancbine/joha Ts«u
Principal Conductor: Robert Irvin* “
Entire company witUfrymtniony orchettr»j|
Only appearances in Indiana J .
■ ■ if?
■' . WEDNESDAY, MXItCH 10, is ptm.
(Anditorimn Series) , \ *
Serenade, La Sonnambola, PM de Denx and Dfcrtusements
(New), and Symphony m,C ^
THURSDAY, MARCH ll/rpA.
Raymonda Variations, Ivttbaa, Allegro Brillantc,
and Stan
Reserved seats: $4.50, $4, $3.50, $2.50, $1 JO * Enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope with remittance INDIANA UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM | Bloomington
«S> 1965, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
[ CLICKS FOR HEART FUND
" -"' J.
World’, Gratiot Gwtamt INDIANA UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM Saturday, March 6,8 p.m. Sunday, March 7, 3 p.m. Tw* Did0,ci ft*gnra Referred aeata: S3 .JO, $2.50, $1.50 (All orchestra teats) Not a Senes Attsactm Eaclose aeli-oddrevod. stiaiped
CHEAT PROBE REPORT—Maj. Gen. Robert Warren, superintendent of the Air Force Academy near Colorado Sprmgs, Colo., tells reporters that the investigation of cheating by cadets has been completed, and that 105 have resigned, including 29 footballers, 11 other athletes.
iiiiiiiiiiiiinimiiiiiiiinniimiiiiiniiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiHiii; Indiana University presents §
A Gala Concerv with
JOAN SUTHERLAND,
mm ma s I mm
mm S mm mm em
Soprano, and the r INDIANA UNIVERSITY i PHILHARMONIC = ORCHESTRA = Tiber IT iimis Mane Director S RICHARD BONYNGE § Guest Conductor E
SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 3 p m. INDIANA UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM Bloomington Joan Sutherland’s first appearance in Indiana. Program includes arias from The Marriage of Figaro and Sent it amid*, the Mad Scene from Lucia and other selectiona for soprano and orchestra.
AMERICA’S YOUNGEST HEART FUND VOLUNTEER is 2-year-old Theresa Mazzari, shown with her surgeon, Dr. George Robinson of New York’s Montefiore Hospital, who implanted a ball-in-cage plastic valve (like the one shown against ruler in inset) inside her heart to replace one that was too small to carry blood from one section to another. She’s the world’s youngest beneficiary of heart valve replacement surgery, and, understandably, an all-out supporter of the 1965 Heart Fund Campaign. The valve, implanted when Theresa was 10 months old, clicks audibly with each heart beat That’s music to Dr. Robinson’s ears.
Reserved seats: $5, $4.50, $3.50, $2.50, $1 JO Enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope with remil
remittance
PARENTS, SISTER KILLED—Wayne Knautz, 15, Is taken to Jan by two detectives in Baltimore, where he is accused of slaying his foster parents, Melvin and Elizabeth Knautz, and their daughter Carol, 11. Police said apparently the boy resented correction by the parents.
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