The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 March 1965 — Page 8
I The Daily Bannar, Greeneastle, Indiana Monday, March 8,1965
OPEN AT 4:45
NOW THRU TUES.
Al: 7:15 - 9:20
FRED MacMURRAY POLLY .BERGEN
STARTS WED.
The No. 1 All Time Attraction All Sean $1.00 One Showing Each Night At 7:15
ELIZABETH TAYLOR RICHARD BURTON REX HARRISON
<l«opatra! n Sat. Matinee At: 2:15
9*ui& WASHINGTON
MARCH OF EVENTS
SEN. ROBERT ROODED BY
KENNEDY MAUMAN
FIVE TIMES AS MUCH AS OTHER SENATORS
SNOOP WITNESS ~ Attorney Thomas A. Bolan. testifying In Washington before the Senate Commerce Committee’s gox’ernment snooping Investigation, says Sen. Robert Kennedy, while attorney general, “planted” a story about a disgruntled Teamsters Union official with Life Magazine while Teamsters President James Hoffa was under indictment. Kennedy denied the "plant.” saying the official, Sam Baron, came to him “in fear of his life.”
By HENRY CATTIC ART
Central Press Washington Writer twtASHINGTON—Senate mail room attendants can attest to W the continuing allure of the Kennedy image. They report that the newly-elected senator from New York, Robert F. Kennedy, is receiving five times as much mail as any other senator. Since his election last November, Kennedy has received some 20,000 invitations alone. These range from major addresses before large and influential groups to picnics,
christenings and bar mitzvas.
This flood of mail is by no means confined to residents of the state Bobby represents. It comes from all over the world, as much from Asia as from Europe. Some want help from the new senator, others simply want to con-
gratulate him on his victory.
A goodly number want to talk to him or to express their thoughts and feelings about his brother, the late President John F. Kennedy. Sen. Kennedy's staff is making a herculean effort to answer all of the letters. If the tide continues at its current rate, he’ll probably have to hire extra help to do it
Senator Bob
Postman rings
constantly
A Nation Remembers
Are not great men the models of nations?” a poet asked. And, the people of India, remembering the late, beloved Jawaharlal Nehru reply: “Indeed, they are”.
Now, as a tribute to Nehru—his life and his India—a memorial exhibition has been set up in New York City. Some 800 photographs, personal papers and effects, and architectural models (from a holy pavilion to a British prison cell like the one in which Nehru was confined) trace the dramatic life of the man who, more than any other, influenced the development of modem India. To this man who promised: “I shall not be unworthy of my people and their affection”, this exhibit, created by the National Design Institute of India, is a document of love and respect Internationaily-kncwn designers, artists, and newsmen gave their time and talents to assemt^e the display in the Union Carbide Building, and Vice-President Humphrey dedicated it as his first act of office.
• GAMESMANSHIP—It seems that, in a Capitalist Society such as ours, there are virtually no limits to commercialism. This can be testified to by an advertisement plugging a new parlor game titled “Victory Over Communism.” The game is modeled after many of those that have won commercial popularity and success, such as “Monopoly.” Only in this one, the players are dealing with clashing ideologies, rather than money or real estate. The ad shows a family clustered around a table in their living room playing the game. It includes a testimonial from the lady of the house: “Last night our family played America’s first anti-Communist game. Joy and satisfaction sent goose bumps up and down my spine as we played. . , We had actually won a victory over Communism because we had a better understanding of the enemy.” Whether or not the game will appeal to the masses, we know not. But we do feel a little uneasy about the potential backlash for those individuals who aren’t particularly good at games. For example, will the fellow on the capitalist side who loses be converted to Communism ? * • • • • “CAPITAL CALLING!”—It will come as no surprise to anyone familiar with the operation of the U. S. government that Washington is still the number one telephone user in the world. According to the American Telephone and Telegraph Co., there are 88.3 telephones per 100 people in Washington. Runners-up are Atlantic City, N. J., and White Plains, N. Y. with 74.5 phones each. The Washington United States has 84,453,000 phones, more than eight times as many as second-place Japan. Mciady: The pre-eminence of Washington in the tele- 'Phone-itis* phone derby is evident to anyone who has spent time watching the capital at “work.” Efforts to call a government official on the phone are met with busy signals with alarming frequency. And at government going-home time it is virtually impossible to get a dial tone to begin making a phone call. Whole exchanges are overloaded, presumably by government workers calling to tell the little woman they’ll be home on time for dinner—-or won’t be.
THE HITBACKS—Here is the chronology of the war being carried into North Viet Nam since the first hitback Feb. 7 to the double strike March 2. They began as a retaliation for the guerrilla attack on the U-S. helicopter base at Pleiku, about midway between Saigon and North Viet Nam border.
^ . . . yta CELLIST CHARLOTTE MOORMAN 1* shown in the windup of her atrange avant-garde recital of “The Swan” in Philadelphia. That’s real blood—hers—streaming over her forehead. During her performance she fired a pistol, read temperature statistics aloud, slapped a composer on the back, jumped into a water-filled tank and struck her head on a pipe, opening a cut over her eye. Nonetheless, she came out and finished her concert She’s wearing a wet nightgown.
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