The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 April 1965 — Page 3

New Award For DePauw Junior A new award designated for a member of the junior class will be introduced Friday, April 30, at DePauw University's annual Recognition Chapel in Meharry Hall. Known as the Lambda Chi Alpha Christian Service Award, the honor with a 1100 cash prize will go to the junior student “who has made the most significant contribution to Christian living at Depauw University.” The winner will be selected by a joint committee of students, faculty and administration. The donor of what Is to become an annual award is an alumnus of DePauw University who wishes to remain anonymous.

Wants Marines On Offensive DA NANG, Viet Nam UPI— The South Vietnamese general whose troops stand guard along the North Vietnamese border said Friday night he hopes the U. S. Marines soon will carry the war to the Comunist enemy. Brig. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi. whose I Corps controls the five provinces nearest to Redheld North Viet Nam, told newsmen "I like the Marines, and I'd very much like to see them go on the offensive.” There are indications that a good many of the 8,000 Marines now on duty in South Viet Nam share Hhi’s hopes. Their mission so far has been purely defensive, and many have shown signs of restivenesa in their static role.

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Signing on this table [*-] of terms of Lee’s surrender of his Army of Northern Virginia to Grant’s Army of Potomac, April 9, 1865, was not the end. J. E. Johnston’s Army of Tennessee continued to elude W. T. Sherman’s advance in the Carolinas. Kirby Smith’s forces remained in action west of the

Mississippi.

It was the end for Lee. His concern was food for his men and their horses. Grant authorized rations from Union stores for the 25.000 Rebels who had been subsisting for some days on parched corn. Spontaneously, Union soldiers shared food and tobacco with the men they had been fighting. “It looked very much as if all thought of war had escaped their minds,” Grant wrote. Many furnishings of the McLean house were carried off as souvenirs by officers present at the surrender. The letter at left

tells how one furnishing became a trophy for the wife of Brig. Gen. George A. Custer, of Sheridan’s

cavalry corps.

The McLean house was dismantled in 1893 to be a war museum in Washington, but the wood and brick carried away were never used. The “McLean House” at Appomattox today is a socalled restoration. CLARK KINNAIRD

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YANKEE C O NFEDERATES: More Rebel generals (8) came from New York than from Louisiana. Texas, Florida or Arkansas.

Two 4-H Clubs Will Seek Distrid Honors

Th« Daily Banner, Oraancattla, Indiana Saturday, April 17,1965

County 4-H Crops Judging Contest was held Thursday night The first place team was from the Reelsville Plow Boys 4-H Club. Members composing the team were: Jot Williams, Donnie Irwin, Stephen Blaydes, and Ricki Raab. They were coached by Robert England

and Vince Green.

Second place Crops Team,

Composer

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION

Hands,” another

compositions.

The DePauw symphony

In the Circuit Court of

, , , j Putnam County. Indian*,

of his own

Notice Is hereby tiven th*t M*un* McCammack was on the 6th day of April. 1065, appointed: Administratrix

dition of Finney’s “Piano Trio m.ck'de^eased. 01 Raymond McCam -

ty,” the group sponsoring the Persichetti’s final appearance AU P Mson! ' having claims against . • A „ sald estate, whether or not now due, march agamst “an anti-populer,, Thursday at 8:lo p.m. in Me- must file the same in said court withillegal and doomed war,” said harry Hall. msfpublicaUra o/'^s notic?or^S about 10.000 persons would par- The 60-member orchestra's claims will be forever barred, ticipate in the day-long dem- regular conductor, Professor Dated at Greencastie, Indiana, this

Herman Berg, will put the mu- 6th day of Apr11 ' 1B65 - through their musical ; Jack p Hinkle

Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana.

the day-long dem

onstration.

The estimate topped the total' sicians

of 8,000 persons who took part | P aces 111 Bartok's “Concerto for

in recent demonstrations at the Orchestra,” and then turn the Probllte C|iuse No 10 M1 White House and other govern- ^ a ton over to Persichetti to ^

coached by Norman Evens, was | ment buildings during the ra- con ^ uc t his own famous work, | Attorney

! “Te Deum,” featuring the uni-

io-n-24-n

Pilot's Action

from Bainbridge High School, j cial crisis in Selma, Ala. This team was made up of | Edgar Steele, John Nichols, * I I J Dick Evens, and Richard Bald- ; UttlCIOlS LCtUCl

win.

Individual honors were as follows: 1st. Dick Evens — 846; 2nd, Joe Williams — 828; 3rd, Ricki Raab — 769; 4th, Edgar Steele — 718; 5th, Stephen Blaydes — 698; 6th, Donnie Irwin — 652. Both teams are eligible to

versity choir with the orches- state of Indiana ^ a ’ . . . < Putnam County

Aspiring student composers will get exposure to Persich- 1 etti’s compositional savvy Wed-

nesday at 1 p.m. when eight Plaintiff.

PHOENIX, Ariz. UPI

ficials today credited a West

In The Putnaa Circuit Court April Term,

1665.

No 20 M3

will perform original composi- | Rlchar(1 c* r Baiiey, tions. Later they will engage in Defendant

German student pilot with sav 30 inforrnal Cntique offered b y nonresident'defendant German student pilot u ith sav- ^eir guest. The public recital Comes now the piantiff and files her mg' “manv lives” bv riding his I. v. complaint herein together with an afmg niai..y nvco oy ruling m. Wlll be in Charterhouse. ndavit that the residence of the decrippled jet fighter to the Persichetti's list of composi- 1 ,r " dant upon dme * nt ,e ‘" h * Pd .‘“l ground in sn flttpnrnt' to I-cppo i 4.• • . Quiry cannot be ascertained and that grouna m an aiiempi: ro Keep . tions in all media is virtually * the above entitled action is for divorct.

participate next Saturday 24th. from crashin » 1010 a cluster of interminable, ranging past the ^ h U e V/wd^af^^m in the District 4-H Crops Judg- ^ arm buildings. The flier was ! 100 mark. He has captured 35 d * y of June - 1985 ' tlie ,aine beln * ^ r 0 ' r 64th day of the April Term. 1665. of

ing at Worthington.

killed. prizes, Military spokesman said theisions. pilot, whose identity was not Among

awards and

Distributed by King Features Syndicate

COmmis- the Putnam Circuit Court, Putnam

! county. State of Indiana, to be heard in the Court House, City of Greencastie.

commissioned Indiana, and answer or demur to *aid

! released pending notification of works are compositions ex- rtetermined^in ^iis* absence. h ** rd ^ Germany, could pressly for the Louisville and h ^ h ^^mx* h ‘t£

seal of said court, at Greencastie, Indiana this 16th day f April. 1665.

Airliner Has A Close Call

WASHINGTON UPI — A Piedmont Airlines pilot guided his craft into what was intended to be a rourtine landing at Washington's National Airport Friday when suddenly he

got a shock.

“Piedmont 63, your wheels are still up,” the control tower

warned him.

Capt. Robert Nance checked Ms instrument panel. It showed the landing gear was down. He pulled up. circled the field, low-

LBJ Will Not Travel Abroad

JOHNSON CITY. Tex. UPI— . .....

President Johnson has decided P act as u slammed into a field master s Association and such ,s EAL >

his family in

have ejected safely before the St. Louis symphony orchestras, plane crashed. t be Lincoln Center of PerformThe F104C exploded on im- in & Arts ' the American Band-

jack P HINKLE Clerk of the Putnam

Circuit Court

against traveling abroad for the next two or three months and will curtail his schedule for that period because of the congressional work load and the Viet Nam situation. The Texas White House said planned visits to the United States by President Ayub Khan of Pakistan and Prime Minister Shastri of India would be postponed from late spring

until the fall.

Ayub Khan was scheduled to

on the Abel brothers farms

Glendale near here.

LBJ Is Resting At Busy Pace JOHNSON CITY. Tex. UPI

— President Johnson kept his KousseviNkv offici,. fre. of lT s prtz e.

nounced activity today. But he

major colleges as Duke Univer-

sity, Washington University , J w0 | n j uree |

and Dartmouth College.

In 1960 the Naumberg Foundation conferred on Persichetti its award for the best symphony written during that year. Two years earlier he received a coveted Guggenheim Fellow-

ship and in

LAS VEGAS. Nev. UPI — A Bonanza Airliner crashed shortly after takeoff from McCarran Field on a training flight Friday, injuring two men. The Federal Aviation Agency

1955 received the was attempting to determine if

Music

was resting at a busy pace. The Chief Executive motored

| see Johnson in Washington j around the Texas countryside April 25-26 and Shastri June near his LBJ ranch for several hours Friday to show the area to visiting Defense Secretary

Robert S. McNamara.

They and their wives looked at Johnson's boyhood home in Johnson City, swung around

Students Seek Viet War Fad

Founda- the crash was caused by a me-

chanical failure or a pilot error.

Persichetti was a bachelors The plane, an F27 Silver graduate of Combs College in D art jet. carried only a pilot 1935. He studied composition at , an d an FAA trainee. Both were the Philadelphia Conservatory 1 listed in goo d condition today

of Music with Paul Nardoff

and conducting with Fritz Reiner at the Curtis Institute while earning the M.M. degree in 1941.

at Sunrise Hospital.

town on a sightseeing tour,

DIGGING IN AT DA NANG—The newest U.S. Marines to arrive at the big Da Nang base in South Viet Nam dig air raid and artillery shelters near their tents. (Radiophoto)

Rivers Above Flood Stage

Freeman Offers Aid To State

The system at Central at $58,611 was the largest expend!.

A year later he became head of the composition department of the Philadelphia Conserva-

WASHINGTON UPI — Stu- • then stopped on the way home tory and earned his doctorate | dents from many sections of at the Lewis place, one of the , 0 f music there in 1945. the country converged on Wash- President’s ranch properties. The Contemporary Music ington today to carry their pro- The group went late in the Festival is sponsored by Detest for an end to the war in afternoon to Granite Shoals Pauw’s School of Music. ArSouth Viet Nam to the White Lake, about 50 miles from the rangements are under the di-

— The

J ^ „ INDIANAPOLIS UPI

T , T Whi« and Wabash Rivers were ™lture Secretary landed salely and th. breathed ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Freeml „ 0 „e re d

ture recommended by

marshal. Sen. Charles Maddox, R-Otterbein, said “it would be

WASHINGTON UPI — Agri- hell of you ever had a fire out

the fire House an<1 the Capitol.

LBJ Ranch, for some boating as rection of Professor Doanld

A spokesman for the “Stu-! they did Thursday after arriv- White, a former studetn of Per-

dents for a Democratic Socie- ing for a long Easter Weekend, sichetti.

Dr. D. H. Austin Dr. R. R. Ruble Chiropractors 201 South Indiana Streat OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT Mon. thru Friday — 9:00 o.m. to 9:00 p.m. Saturday — 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Talaphena Ol 3-3024

a sigh of relief.

Orville L. to donate

The airplane carried 36 pasbv the weekend or soon thereBengers and a crew’ of three on

the Atlanta to Washington ;lfter '

flight.

merous points and due to crest g° verrimen t-owned feed grain in

Five States Hit By Flood Waters

I Upstream from Lafayette, the Wabash was falling. At Covington, it stood at 16.4 feet Friday morning and was due to fall below flood stage of 16 feet Fri-

, day evening.

Indiana and Michigan areas where livestock herds were harmed by tornadoes. Freeman’s action followed President Johnson's declaration of all Midwestern states affected by recent tornadoes and floods as “major disaster”

areas.

The agriculture secretary said

ST. PAI L, Minn. I PI—The The Montezuma level was 18.3

Mississippi, surging 23 feet feet and the tendency falling. Indiana and Michigan were the above its normal depth, flooded and the g t ream was scheduled first of the hard-hit areas to towms along a 600-mile stretch dro p below 7 flood stage of 14 seek assistance for livestock, in five states today and slowly Indiana counties named were

Its mightiest

feet about noon Sunday.

there.” Chairman Robert O'Bannon. D-Corydon, said “we know we ; are not going to replace the women's building for a long time,” so the precautions should be taken, the senator said. The women’s building is one of the original structures in the cluster of the hospital founded in

1946.

Other recommendations of the marshal approved included Evansville, New Castle and Richmond hospitals. However, one of tw’o proposed Richmond projects was deferred, invoiv-

Chevrolet

inched toward ““fe**'-*'- 01 - j Boone, Elkhart, Grant, Hamil-' ing changes ind oors and staircrest in history. The Terre Haute level was 17 ton Howard> L a p or t e , La- ways costing $88,000.

A northern cold snap and an feet f a iii ng due to drop be- Gran£re Marshall St Josenh S C JL° f ^7^1 3nd low the 14 ' f ° ot flood mark early Starke.’and Wells’ ’

, Distribution of the free food

early today slowed spring Monday

thaws and delayed a record 27- ' , . foot crest here until Tuesday, The Wabash was stationary ^ rains ^ uil1 be made

giving the angry river more a t 20.8 feet at Hutsonville, due time to batter, soak and under- to crest early Saturday at 21 mine makeshift dikes. and f a jj below flood stage of People by the thousands have ., 0 feet Monday morning,

fled the Mississippi shoreline s i

walled cities as waves and ice Vincennes had a reading of washed over and through their 16.3 feet rising with a crest of crude sand and earthen bul- 17 expected Sunday and a drop warks. below the 16-foot flood mark by Thousands of exhausted Tuesday,

workers—city men. farmers,

youngsters and prisoners—piled Mount Carmel expected a sandbags on levees and plugged crest Sunday a foot above the leaks from near the Mississippi 17-foot flood mark. It was 17.3 headwaters in northern Minne- rising Friday morning, sota to Hannibal, Mo.—nearly Along the White River a crest

600 miles. was due at Spencer late Friday INDIANAPOLIS UPI night at 13.5 feet, six inches be- bers of the Indiana

low flood stage, and at Ellison Committee approved

O'Bannon said the committee “hopes to find a less expensive way to get the job done.”

through Budget director Jack Booher

the Agriculture Stabilization said he hoped tha t most of the and Conservation county com- committee meetings for the mittees. next year can be held in the The grains will be limited to var i 0Ug state institutions so as flood-stranded livestock, un- ac q ua int two new members, idenfified or co-mingled. for Rep william T. Sebree, D-An-which feed and pasture are not dersoni and R e p. Robert B. Anavailable, and livestock for derS on. R-Valparaiso, with the

which producers have been un- institutions,

able to arrange feed or pasture.

Funds Approved For Hospitals

Regarding Travel WASHINGTON UPI — Com-

merce Secretary John T. Connor said Friday that the government had no intention of

—Mem- telling Americans where to | Budget travel or where not to travel, j

Friday But he said the dollar out-

17 feet, a foot below 7 flood most expenditures urged by the flow 7 from overseas tourism had

stage. The crest at Edwardsport was expected to be 16 feet, flood stage, Sunday afternoon. At Petersburg, the White w 7 as 17.7 feet falling and it was anticipated the drop below 7 16-foot flood stage would coihe Sunday.

NONE BETTER Every Day 24 hours WAFFLES and PANCAKES

SOUTH ON 43

THE WAFFLE HOUSE

OPENING SOON

state fire marshal for hospitals grown “to serious proportions” for the mentally ill. and was likely to get worse un- I The projects included an an- less more Americans decide to tomatic fire alarm system at take their vacation at home. , Central State in Indianapolis. A greater effort must be s They were among numerous made to develop travel in the j expenditures the committee United States. Connor said in a considered at a day-long meet- speech to the American Society ! ing. | of Newspaper Editors.

BANNER ADVERTISING PAYS

American Legion Dance Post 58 Saturday, April 17 Music by DAUGHERTY’S COMBO

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