The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 May 1965 — Page 7

Wheat Support |Rusfc Discusses Bill Approved Missile Sites

$85,000 Raised By Methodists

INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Indiana Methodist church members have contributed more than

WASHINGTON UPI — The WASHINGTON UPI — SecHouse wheat subcommittee re tary of State Dean Rusk said Wednesday approved a streng- Wednesday two or more Soviet

thened form of President John-1 anti-aircraft missile sites may $85,000 to help repair or rebuild son's wheat support bill. It now be under construction in five churches and two parsonwould boost farm income and North Viet Nam. He called this ages destroyed or damaged in cut government costs by raising a deepening Soviet commitment the Palm Sunday tornadoes, consumer prices slighUy. to Hanoi. Bishop Richard C. Raines The bill would revise and Rusk told a news conference said the money will be used to

that “missile associated equip- help rebuild churches at Alto, ment ’ was believed to be pres- Greentown, Russiaville, Moran ent at one ot the sites. Tamarack and parsonages He did not report that any Alto and Greentown. missiles themselves were at the He said the Sim p SOn Church sites, but he said it was to be j n Fort Wayne contributed presumed the sites would not $M88 largest from any congre .

remain empty. gation .

Earlier this year, administra-

tion officials disclosed that one SAM missile site had been under construction in the Hanoi area. The initials stand for

"surface to air missile.” Rusk said today there might

be a second SAM site in the

continue for four years a “marketing certificate” support program for wheat which Congress approved last year for the 1964

and 1965 crops.

Under the subcommittee bill, wheat growers who complied with government planting allotments would get price supports at the full “fair earning power’’ parity price on about 45 per cent of their crop — the proportion of total U.S. wheat output which goes for domestic

food.

Under the 1965 program, domestic food wheat is supported at $2 a bushel. The subcommittee bill would boost the rate in 1966 to $2.50 or $2.55 a bushel. The extra money would be raised by hiking the cost of "marketing certificates’ which farmers get as part of their price support. These certificates are sold to processors, who will presumably pass on the increased cost to consumers.

Will Announce Ruling June 2

State Policemen Get Promotions INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Four promtjtiona effective June 1 were announced by Indiana Stata Police Supt. Robert A. O’Neal. First Sgt. Douglas Buck will advance to lieutenant at general headquarters in Indianapolis. He is director of tha questioned documents section in the investigation division. At Kentland post, Sgt. Edgar Likina, Veedersburg, will become first sergeant and commanding officer, advancing from* chief of the Lafayette diartict laboratory. Trooper James Klelman of Rushvilla will advance to detective sergeant at Connersville district, and Trooper Jamea L Johnson of Rochester will become A sergeant and asume •afety education duties at Peru

J>ost.

INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The

Hanoi arta. He said officials Indiana State Board of Tax did not know whether there Commisioners plans to announce might be others as well. ita ru ii ng on the tax status of Rusk said he did not attach retirement homes next Wednes-

great significance to a recent interview between industrialist Cyrus Eaton and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin. Eaton said Kosygin told him that Russia and China would draw together. and Russia might enter the Vietnamese war unless the United States changed its poli-

cy-

Howeevr, Rusk said, it was very important that the other side not haw any mistaken notion it could get the United States to withdraw from Viet Nam by thtreatening a larger war. or that it could start a larger war with “impunity.'

day. Dr. R. B. Stewart, new chairman of the board, said today a news conference would be held at 3:30 p.m. on June 2 to announce the decision. Stewart did not say whether the board had made up its mind and was delaying an announcement, or whether decisions have not been completed. The board was scheduled to rule in several cases where local tax review boards levied property tax on homes for retired persons. In Johnson County, the local

He said it was very import- board taxed themulti-million-ant that no one in the struggle do,lar Greenwood Village, built misunderstand the gravity of severa l years ago by the Inditha situation or the fact that I and State Teachers Association, the United States is “utterly I and part of the value of the Inserious’’ in is commitment in diana Methodist Home at Viet Nam. Franklin. Rusk reiterated that there Later, several other county could be peace in Viet Nam any boards taxed all or portions of time the Communists were wil- retirement homes, and the matling to leave their neighbors ter became a major issue,

alone.

OK Bond Issue

Fail To Find Crisis Solution

INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The Indiana State Board of Tax

Commisioners has aproved a $1 SANTO DOMINGO UPI — Johnson County Memorial Hos- ca i differences which have dipital at Franklin will use to fi- vided this strife-tont city ap-

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peared as distant a* ever today, 1 almonst a month after U. S. troops landed to help restore order. U. 8. officials were trying without apparent success to find a compromise solution which w'ould satisfy both MaJ. Gen. Antonio Imbert Barrera, head of the military junta, government, and Col. Francisco Caamano Deno, the rebel leader. U. S. Ambassador W. Tapley Bennett and Deputy Defense Secretary Cyrus R. Vance, the principal American spokesman here, talked Wednesday with both Imbert and Caamano. No result was announced. Well - informed sources said the two Americans emphasized the difficulty of finding a national leader acceptable to both sides. Jose A. Mora, secretary general of the Organization of American States (OAS>, also talked to rival leaders during the day. Mora is trying to persuade Imbert to transfer the junta- ; held radio station here to OAS ' control, and get Caamano to ; admit inter-American patrols to the rebel-held pocket in southeastern Santo Domingo. A premature OAS announcement Tuesday eaid the junta had agreed to turn over the radio station. It was learned later, how*ever, that it was willing only to let the OAS handle educational and cultural programming while the junta continued to control new* and propaganda broadcasts. There was no immediate w'ord on the progress of Mora's talks with the rebels. Six hundred U. S. Marines who landed here in the early days of the revolt boarded the converted aircraft carrier Boxer Wednesday, preparing to re- : turn to their home base. The Marines were withdrawn specifically because Latin American troops are arriving to replace them, but their departure also is a sign that the crisis is easing.

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Workers Under New Wage Law INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Indiana Attorney General John J. Dilon ruled that canning industry employes are not agricultural workers and therefore will be covered by a new state minimum wage law which becomes effective July 1. Dillon had been asked to determine whether canneries which processes tomatoes and other farm crops come under the exemption of agricultural labor. Dillon concluded that “the nature and character of the service that the employe is hired to perform and not the character of the business” is what should determine whether the service performed by an employe come under minimum wage legislation. Dillon also advised labor commissioner Hobert P. Butler that cannery employes would come under another law which permits the labor department to assist employes who are owed up to $500 in w-ages.

“I doubt that the House will pass a bill without an outright repeal of the poll tax.” said j Chairman Emanuel Celler, D- | N. Y., of the House Judiciary Committee in commenting on the Senate's passage Wednesday of a bill that did not include the provision. Speaker John W. McCormack. D-Mass., also has thrown his influence behind the demands for a poll tax ban. The House version of the voting rights bill, a top-priority administration measure, has already been approved by the judiciary committee. Leaders held up floor consideration until after the Senate passed its ver-

sion.

The committee inserted a flat repeal provision for poll taxes despite opposition from the administration, winch said the constitutionality of the move was in doubt. Both House and Senate bills are aimed at ending discrimination in voter registra-

tion.

Helping Hand

Plan To Keep Ban In Bill WASHINGTON UPI — Key House members planned today to insist on keeping their controversial ban against state and local poll taxes in voting rights legislation.

WASHINGTON UPI — The Post Office Department announced Wednesday that it will assist the Office of Economic Opportunity in recruiting workers for the anti-poverty program by furnishing job application blanks at all first class post offices. It said special window's to dispense the blanks will be opened in the largest post offices.

National Debt Hike Approved WASHINGTON UPI — The House Ways & Means Committee approved legislation to raise the national debt limit from $324 billion to a record-break-ing $328 billion. This is $1 billion less than the administration said it needed to keep the government on a busi-ness-like basis. A committee source said after a closed session that the law'makers knocked $1 billion Rent Subsidy Plan Attacked WASHINGTON UPI — The House Republican Policy Committee has attacked President Johnson’s rent subsidy plan as j “socialistic” and unworkable. Committee Chairman John R. Rhodes, Ariz., charged Wednesday the proposal would "kill in- , centive for home ownership and ' make renters wards of the gov-

ernment.”

“It is such a departure from the ordinary way of doing | things.” Rhodes added “that it can be characterized as a means of arriving at a social- . ist state.” The rent subsidy plan proposes government subsidies for defraying the rent of certain physically handincapped. elderly and displaced persons.

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Thursday, May 27, 1965

off the administration's request because they felt it w'as not needed. He said that at only one point — March, 1966 — would the national debt bump up against the new ceiling. During the other months, the Treasury is expected to have a “cushion” of several billion dollars. It is the 12th time in 10 years that Congress has been asked to raise the legal debt limit. The debt is now about $316 billion.

Awarded $25,000

TERRE HAUTE UPI — A Vigo Superio- Court jury Wednesday awarded Peter Wimsey 4, Terre Haute, $25,000 damages for injuries suffered when a dog attacked him last year. The boy’s face was permanently scarred w hen he was bitten by a German shepherd , owned by Mr. and Mrs. John Palmer, Terre Haute. Mr*. Joyc* ■ Wimsey had asked for $25,000 I damages on behalf of her son.

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