The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 May 1965 — Page 2

1 Th« Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Friday, May 28, 1965 Editorial-Wise Pay For Combat" (From: Atlanta Journal) There is little doubt that members of the United States armed forces are engaged in combat in Viet Nam. It is almost a daily event—and a tragic one—to read that one or more American military men have been killed or captured or are missing in that area. Despite the general acceptance of this military situation. the comptroller general of the United States is operating with his usual fine legalistic approach to how servicemen should be treated. There is combat pay for the men engaged in actual hostilities in Viet Nam. This is as it should be. Thera should be some recognition and compensation for the additional hazards they face there. In this particular conflict, however, it is called “hostile fire pay,” and the comptroller general has declared that a i an must face hostile fire for at least six days in any 30day period in order to qualify. This was brought out when the comptrollei general directed the armed forces not to give hostile fire credit to pay accounts of men captured or missing in action unless they qualified. ^ ^ j u - In other words, if an aviator were shot down on his fifth day s mission and icaptured or a ground soldier were missing on his fourth day of hostile fire, neither are to receive any combat pay compensation. This is a ridiculous approach! The men who are engaging the enemy in Viet Nam deserve better than this cold-blooded and legahstic-Scrooge-like attitude from the comptroller general.

British Princess Will Visit U. S. LONDON UPI — Princess Margaret has been trying for 15 years to win permission for a trip to the United States. She finally got her wish Thursday and will see America for the first time in November. A brief announcement from Kensington Palace, where the S4-year-old princess resides with her husband, Lord Snowdon. said the couple would make an official visit to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Washington and New York. Private stops have not been announced., The trip, by air, will begin' Nov. 4 in the Golden Gate city. The strong - willed princess was IS when she was first i turned down by her father, the i late King George VI. Through the years her sister, Queen Elizabeth II, also has denied the request on the ground that such a trip would impose too great a security problem for Ameri-

can officials.

County Hospital Dismissed Thursday: Mrs. John Thatcher and son, Greencastle Wanda Grimes, Greencastle ” George Stevens, Greencastle Shirley Kearschner, Greencastle. . Mrs. William Norris and son, Greencastle. Marilyn Wood. Greencastle Terry Twomey, Greencastle Roberta McClellan, Roach-

dale

Tressman Parker, Stilesville Thomas Bixler, Ladoga Mary Spencer, Spencer

Roachdale Delta Hold Installation Theta Lambda Chapter of Delta Theta Tau Sorority held installation of officers for 196566. President, Elizabeth Crosby; Vice-President. Marjorie Reed; Recording Secretary, Alberta Kopp; Corresponding Secretary, Georgia Thomas; Treasurer, Helen Miller; Sergeant at Arms, Lelah Pickel; Historian, Lorene Rusk.

We will be CLOSED Sunday, May 30th Monday, May 31st ROYALE CAFE Greencastle, Indiana

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HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-21 S. Jackson Si. GraancaiHa. Ind. Businas* Ptiona OL 3-5151 Somusl R. Rariden, Publisher Norma Hill, Gan. Mgr. Elizabath Raridan, Businas* Mgr. Jamas B. Zais, Managing Editor William D. Hoopor. Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle. Indiana, as Second Class Mai matter under Act af March 7, 1B78. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 40c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. $S.OO per year Outside of Putnam Co. $10.00 per year Outside of Indiana $14.00 per year Bible Thought You yourselves are our letter of recommendation, written on your hearts, to be known and ready by all men. 2 Corinthians

3:2.

Many non-church persons do not meet a minister or a missionary in their daily lives. Their impressions of the church are what they see in various Christian people whom they know and meet. Personal And Local News Cresent Club will met Wednesday, June 2 at 2 o'clock at the home of Mildred Rush. Tri Kappa will meet Tuesday, June 1, at Charterhouse. Dinner will be at 6:30 p.m. Initiation will be at 8 p.m. Mrs. Violet Sears has entered the Putnam County Hospital for observation. She resides on Avenue C. Maple Heights Home Demonstration Club will meet Wednesday night, June 2 at the club house. Please note change of date. Mr. and Mrs. William Lawrence III and children. Peter and Molly, are here from Rochester, New York, visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Lawrence. Gobin Vacation Bible School June 14 through 25, 9 to 11 a.m. Register at Charterhouse this Sunday or call Martha Schneider, OL 3-5549. Fillmore Band Parents will meet Tuesday, June 1, at 7:30 at the school building. Final plans for the stand at the Frol- ! ics will be made. Please try to attend. A special Slngspiration service will be held this Sunday j evening at 7:30 at the Fillmore Christian Church. Everyone in the Fillmore area is invited to | come and sing his favorite I hymns and some new ones too. “Say What You Think,” a 30-1 minute taped television show originating in Greencastle, wull be telecast tomorrow at 3 p.m. on channel 6 (WFBM-TV), In-^ dianapolis. Interviews with Greencastle residents and DePauw University students w’ere conducted Wednesday downtown and on the campus for the informal production emceed by WFBM’s Jim Gerrard.

Ruth Pry left Friday for Billings, Montana, where she will make her future home. Brother Charles McGhee will preach at the Long Branch Church of Christ Sunday May 30, at 11 a. m. Bible classes for all ages will begin at 10:15 a. m. Visitors welcome. Memorial Services will be held at New Providence Baptist Church south of Mt. Meridian on Sunday June 5th at 2:00 p. m. Walter Jeffs will be the speaker. Hurst - Collins Post American Legion of Cloverdale will have charge of the military

service.

Ray G. Potter and wife of Riverside, Calif., are visiting friends and relatives in Putnam County and Crawfordsville this week. They spent a few days with Mrs. Ed Maddox and Mrs. Morris Berry. She was also a guest of her sister, Mrs. Grace

Maddox.

Junior High Party At Country Club The Country Club Junior High School members are having their “out of school” party tonight at 7:30 to 9:30. Committee members planning the party are Mr. and Mrs. John Whitaker, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Frye, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Harlan, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Henry and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn

Monnett.

Merry Jills Visit Local IBM Plant The Merry Jills Home Demonstration Club met May 20 for a tour of the IBM plant. The tour w r as conducted by an IBM manager who explained in considerable detail the many opreations of the plant. The members of the club w-ere surprised to learn of the diverse functions of the various departments. The office which received orders from all over the United States and the automated shipping department were special points of interest. Seventeen Merry Jills were present for the tour. Rose Ann Brady was a guest.

O.E.S. NOTICE Stated meeting of Groveland Chapter No. 330 on Tuesday, j June 1 7:30 p. m. A special^ Memorial service will be held. | Also it is Dads night. Members please bring cookies. Visitors from other chapters are welcome. Clara Everts W. M. I

Miners Killed UTASHINAL, Japan UPI — Four miners were killed here Thursday in a goal mine explosion when sparks from drilling i operations ignited gas in the shaft

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PMNOM PENH, Cambodia UPI — Cambodian ruler Prince Norodom Sihanouk Thursday showed off to the diplomatic corps the $200,000 sports club and swimming pool he ordered built at Battambang, northwest

of the capital.

Sheinwold On Bridge Declarer Makes Siam By Leaving Trump Out By ALFRED SHEINWOLD “You are very polite and patient,” a kibitzer told me recently at a tournament (much to my surprise). “Your partner just threw a trick away, and you congratulated him for his beautiful play.” South dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH A A 9 6 3 S? 1063 0 K 7 4 + AQ9 WEST EAST 4 KJ42 4 1087$ V 98 752 OQ85 OJ1096 4 J 8 73 4 104 SOUTH 4 Q AKQJ4 O A 3 2 4 K652 South West North East 1 Pass 2 NT Pass 6 <5> All Pass Opening lead — 9 My partner won the first trick with the jack of hearts and continued w r ith the ace of hearts. Then he abandoned trumps, leaving one trump still in the East hand. Declarer took dummy’s top clubs and led the low club toward his hand. East pounced on this trick with his small trump, and my kibitzer snorted with disgust. These new players couldn’t even count trumps! East returned the jack of diamonds to declarer’s ace, and South cashed the king of clubs to discard a low diamond from dummy. Eventually he ruffed his losing diamond in dummy, making the slam. UNDESERVED The kibitzer’s compliment was undeserved, because my politeness was with the kibitzer, not with my partner. South did not throw' a trick away by leaving a trump out; drawing trumps would cost him the slam. Suppose South draws three trumps. Then he must lose a club and a diamond. What can he do with those losers? When East ruffed on the third round of clubs, he got only a club that was of no use to South. As the play went, this did not help the defense. If East failed to ruff, it would be just as bad. South would take the king of clubs and ruff his last club with dummy’s ten of hearts. Then South would get back to his hand to draw the last trump and would eventually lose a diamond. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one diamond, and the next player passes. You hold: Spade A 9 6 3 Heart 10 6 3 Diamond K 7 4 Club A Q 9. What do you say? Answer: Bid one spade. You cannot jump to 2 NT without a stopper in hearts. Bid your suit, such as it is, and await developments.

march through Mississippi’* rural Rankin County. In Georgia, a group similar in size planned a shorter march — to use the bus stop at tiny Crawfordville — to test public accommodations in a showdown that has already caused the alleged beating of a white civil rights worker, tense confrontations and the arrival of a bevy of Federal Bureau of Investigation agents. The Mississippi march, down a lonesome highway from the rural community of Fannin, was to protest voter discrimination and in support of the predominantly Negro Freedom Party in its efforts to unseat Mississippi congressmen they allege were illegally elected because of discrimination. Negroes gathered around a pickup truck near a burned church Thursday night in Brandon, Miss., to hear plans for the march. “Hot grits will be served Saturday morning,” said a Congress of racially equality leader. “Coffee will be served after the march.” The Justice Department filed a voter discrimination suit last month, alleging that more than 12.000 of the 13,264 whites of voting age are registered in Rankin County while only 94 of 6,944 Negroes were registered. At Crawfordville, civil rights workers hoped to integrate the Liberty Cafe. The move to the cafe was to coincide with the arrival of a bus because the cafe will have to open to serve passengers. Negroes found the cafe closed when they called in a mass visit Thursday.

He emphasized, however, the need for a faster system to deal with new and similar threats to the peace and stability of other nations. “It is clear that we need new international machinery geared to meet fast-moving events,” he said in his address prepared for delivery to a graduation audience assembled in the Heart of Texas Fairgrounds. “When hours can decide the fate of generations, the moment of decision must become the moment of action.” Pledging staunch United States support for the interAmerican force now assigned to maintaining Dominican peace, Johnson announced issuance of orders today for removal of an additional 1,700 U. S. troops Saturday from the more than 22,000 armed forces personnel ashore at the peak of the Dominican crisis. This brought to 3,300 the total withdrawals ordered this week as the inter-American force, commanded by Brazilian Gen. Hugo Penasco Alvim, was enlarged by contingents from other Latin nations. The President aid he had ordered the U. S. commander, Lt. Gen. Bruce Palmer, to discuss further withdrawals with Penasco.

STATUS SYMBOL MENLO PARK, Calif. UPI— The private elevator is the newest status symbol in this residential community south of San Francisco. Although originally conceived as optional, almost all new tenants of a large new apartment house complex have them installed, architect Morgens Morgensen said. The elevators connect the living room, bedroom and garage levels. The teen-agers, however, apparently find the elevator most useful. They use them for private telephone booths.

CASTRO TO WEST NEW YORK UPI—The man who “conquered living space” will soon be seeking new rooms to conquer in the Midwest and on the West Coast. By the end of 1965, Bernard Castro, creator of the convertible sofa to provide sleeping space in cramped homes and apartments, will be opening new outlets in Los Angeles and San Francisco, as well as new i branches in other major cities, ; including Chicago and Pittsburgh. Like the rest of the chain, the new stores will operate on a factory-to-customer principle.

Johnson Speaks At Baylor U. WACO, Tex. UPI — President Johnson, reporting the scheduled withdrawal of an additional 1.700 U. S. troops from the Dominican Republic, called today for a new and much faster international system for snuffing out attempted Communist takeovers in this hemisphere. The Chief Executive, speaking at Baylor University commencement exercises, was grateful that a Dominican cease - fire had ended the threat of “wholesale bloodshed” sparked by a “well-tainted, disciplined band of Communist.”

Torture Prisoners NEW DELHI UPI — India charged Thursday that Pakistan is torturing Indian prisoners captured in the Rann of Kutch border fighting. It said this was “in marked contrast to the most humane and correct treatment” of Pakistani prisoners.

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The diamond engagement ring is among the most cherished symbols of the constancy and beauty of love, reports the Jewelry Industry Council.

Fear 300 Dead CALCUTTA. India UPI — More than 200 workers were feared killed in an earthshaking explosion which ripped through the Bhori coal mines, 150 miles northeast of Calcutta, Thursday night.

Two Freedom Marches On Tap By United Prets Internotional A band of 150 Negroes, with the promise of “hot grits” at the end of the road, planned to head out today on a freedom

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