The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 June 1965 — Page 1

Weather Forecast CLOUDY, WARMER High, 80; Low, 60s

VOLUME SEVENTY-THREE

Th»e Daily Banners

ItlDl V‘A STATS

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UIBrifMrav" For All"

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1965 UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE NO. 192

SPACE TOURISTS SPLASH DOWN SAFELY

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End 4-Day Trip In Blue Yonder

Tryouts Wednesday Notre Dame Speaker Dramatic tryouts for “The SOUTH BEND UPI — McSound of Music,” second of the George Bundy, President John-

Putnam County Playhouse productions, will be held Wednesday, June 9 at 7:00 p.m. at Speech Hall, DePauw University. All who auditioned for vocal parts must also attend the dramatic tryouts. There are several non-vocal bit parts available, and anyone interest•d in them should also come.

son special assistant for national security, Sunday told a commencement audience at the University of Notre Dame here the United States faces four basic problems in Santo Domin-

go and Saigon.

“We are looking at the problems of power and of peace and of the interests of other men

Many workers are needed for

set construction, costumes, and a ^ so of * he ambitions of the

makeup, properties, lights and backstage. People interested in this phase of the theater should call Bunny Bergmann at OL

3-6936.

communists, he said. Bundy participated in the school’s commencement exercises and received an honorary doctorate

degree.

Shots Exchanged At Bainbridge Sunday

DePauw Gets Three Gifts Of $2,500,000 Three gifts to DePauw Uni-

v e r ■ i t y totalling 52,500.000 projected in the plan spelled out

were revealed yesterday by the by the President are:

Next Shot In Space August 9

SPACE CENTER, Houston

A 24-year-old Portland, Oregon. Negro was lodged in the Putnam County jail at 4 a. m. Sunday after exchanging shots with several police officers in Bainbridge.

James Mathew Youngblood

1 PI The United States is ex- w - as booked at the jail on the pected to try on Aug. 9 to erase c harge of assaulting a police Russia s No. 1 remaining co- 0 ffi cer with a deadly weapon.

mic record cosmonaut \ alery Police said Youngblood first inis>ion control said. Bykovsky s orbital endurance W as noticed acting suspiciously There was radio contact

shortly after midnight when he started holding up traffic on

SPACE CENTER. Houston UPI — Space aces James WcDivitt and Edward White, “feeling great,” splashed down in the Atlantic from their four-day space ride today 4ft to 50 miles short of their assigned target, but well within the swift reach of recovery forces. At least two helicopters were hovering protectively over the spot when the capsule, now weighing about 4,700 pounds, hit ttie water. A helicopter was within fiio miles of it and reported a visual

sighting.

The official time gixen for the splashdown was 1:13 p.m. EDT,

mark of 119 hours 6 minutes. The flight is that of Gemini-5

Hoosier school s president, Dr.

William E. Kerstetter.

Dr. Kerstetter made the sur-

(1> a science center, includ- an<: * ^ or s ^ ie€T spectacle it S. 36 mg equipment, for chemistry, may even surpass the four-day town.

prise announcement yesterday afternoon to approximately

MRS. STONER AWARDED CITATION Margaret Emily Stoner of Greencastle is awarded her alumni citation by DePauw President Kerstetter. Mrs. Stoner, one of eight to receive the distinguished award, is * 1927 almuna of the university.

McNaughton Discusses Crisis In Viet Nam

The United States is prepared for a long continued conflict in South Vietnam, assistant secretary of defense John T. McNaughton told DePauw University graduates here yesterday. McNaughton made the declaration in a major address that dealt at length with the crisis in Southeast Asia to which he admitted “I have been devoting a considerable amount of my time recently.” He has been in South Vietnam twice in the past four months. Recognizing the grow mg desire of the academic community to be informed on foreign affairs. McNaughton called for better communication between the government and academia. In his speech, therefore, he said he hoped to “go into greater detail and to deal with subtler nuances than most public occasions . . . will allow about matters of difficulty, doubt and controversy within the Government.” “We are in South Vietnam McNaughton empnasized, “to keep a promise. The reputation of America from Berlin to Thailand is at stake today in our undertaking behind the Government and people of South Vietnam. “We are there to draw a stop-line to Asian Communist aggression, and we are there on a mission to help South Vietnam—indeed all the countries in the area—to make progress through orderly change. “These are our ends. They are fundamentally right; and our reputation as a world power turns on our achieving them. “Communist China sees the U.S. Government s commitment to the independence of South Vietnam as real, and she sees the U.S. Government's influence in the Far East as turning on whether that commitment is proved to be worthless. We are being tested; that test is one 20 Years Ago Virgil Deem transacted business in Indianapolis. Miss Josephine Stoner spent the day in Terre Haute. Jack Newgent went to Camp Atterbury pending transfer to Keesler Field, Mississippi, for training in the Army Air Reserve corps.

of the largest stakes at issue,” he said. “South Vietnam is not another Korea.” McNaughton maintained. ‘‘The approach there is not at destroying armed forces or winning control of territory, but at destroying the roots of the existing government and exhausting the patience of the population. The basic step in the Communist technique is to demonstrate the government's inability to provide physical security.” The 1942 DePauw alumnus characterized the Viet Cong techniques as one of assassination. kidnaping, terrorization, sabotage and intimidation—all methods of interrupting and undermining the normal governmental processes, local, regional and national. “The analogy to the "protection rackets’ run by organized gangsters in big cities in the twenties is very strong. This is the process that the Hanoi regime called into play in South Vietnam. It is the process. I warn you that may be beginning now in Thailand, where we have recently witnessed the assassinations of rural officials, simultan e o u s 1 y with bland statements in Peking that Thailand is ripe for insurg-

ency.”

McNaughton said the South Vietnamese forces outnumber (Continued on Page 2) Mrs. Johnson Ends Vacation CANEEL BAY PLANTATION V. I., UPI — A tanned and relaxed Lady Bird Johnson said goodbye to this tropical paradise today, ending a fiveday vacation in which she learned how to cope with the deadly barracuda. The brush with the sharptoothed fish came Sunday while the First Lady was swimming in the blue waters of the Carribbean Sea off Turtle Beach on St. John Island with snorkel equipment. Mrs. Johnson didn't recognize the killer and the barracuda was apparently equally unimpressed. It swam away without bothering either Mrs. Johnson or her guide, Noble Samuel — a lifeguard for the National Park Service.

News Of Boys U. S. FORCES, VIETNAM— Army Specialist Four John R. Stout, 20, son of Harry E. Stout, Greencastle, Ind., was assigned to the U. S. Army Support Command. Vietnam. May 23, as a military police-

man.

Specialist Stout, a 1962 gradate of Greencastle High School, entered the Army in February 1963. He completed basic training at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. Police Report Three Arrests Rex Allen Vansandt, 18, Niles. Michigan, was arrested by City Officer Bill Masten on Bloomington Street at. 7:45 Saturday evening. The youth was charged with failure to exhibit proper registration. William Collins, 35, Roachdale, was jailed at 9 p. m. Saturday by Sheriff Kenneth Knauer and Deputy Paul Mason on a charge of failure to pro-

vide.

James Terry. 39. Cloverdale. was jailed at 3 p. m. Saturday by Deputy Mason on a fraudulent check charge. Rites Wednesday For Geo. Bailey George Bailey, 67, Greencastle R. 5. died at the Putnam County hospital Monday morning. He was bom February 22. 1898. in Indianapolis, the son of McClellan and Margaret Dillon Bailey. He was- formerly employed at E. C. Atkins Saw Works in Indianapolis for twenty years before his retirement. He was a member of the Applegate Masonic Lodge of Fillmore. Survivors are: his wife. Hazel; two daughters. Mrs. Wanda Hammond. Greencastle. and Mrs. Donna Badger. Indianapo lis; one sister, Helen Prather Indianapolis; five brothers, Otto Olin and Elmer. Indianapolis Forrest, of Barnard, and Lacey of Franklin. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2:00 p.m. at the Rector Funeral Home. Burial will be m Fillmore cemetery. Calling hours at the funeral home after 7 o’clock this eve-

ning

Masonic Notice Stating meeting of Applegate Lodge No. 155 F and AM, Fillmore, Tues., June 8. at 7:30 p.m. Visitors welcome. Franklin Rairne, W.M.

orbital voyage of Gemini-4 astronauts James McDivitt and

Edward White.

Informed sources said U. S. space leaders and considering

anc j the possibility of giving Gemi(31 a new field house with ni-5's crew—veteran astronaut gymnasium and swimming L. Gordon Cooper Jr. and rookie ^ een pool. Charles Pete Conrad — a chance All the proposed structures to make the world’s first at-

two are for one million dollars would replace facilities built tempt to link up with another each. The three donors wish to before 1917 when the univer- satellite in orbit,

remain anonymous. sity’s enrollment was approximately 900. The coeducational Wind Docs Damage

The tornado-like wind that

physics and mathematics,

(2) a fine arts or cultural complex that would include a

„„„ .. .. . large auditorium, a music 3.000 persons attend.ng the pn- b „, ld i ni .

vate institution s 126th annua! commencement ceremonies in

Bowman Gymnasium.

One of the gifts is for onehalf million dollars. The other

In accepting the gifts now has 2,300 students. Pauw also accepts the chal- in addition to the twelve mil-

lenge of the donors to treble lion dollars earmarked for new accompanied Sunday afterthe sum in two years, thus re- construc ti 0 n. a similar sum noon ’ s rain storm damaged

suiting in a grand total of 510,- would be added to endowment the room of the hom€ of Deputy ba< ' k ' ^ t 000 > 000 - funds! The final 56 million Sheriff Percy Rice, east of the exchange of shots,

ic triple sought would be applied to cur- Bainbridge. Two trees in the Young loo vas voon e m ue Kerstet- rent budget operations over the Yard were also blown down. hand and hip. police repor er

Announcement of gifts coincided with

ters first major public elaboration of the university’s ten-year improvement program, “The Design for a Decade,” first mentioned publicly in his in-

augural address in 1963. Geared to seek $30,000,000 by

ten-year period. Stated Convocation Stated Convocation. Greencastle Chapter No. 22, Royal Arch Masons, Wednesday evening. June 9, 7:30 o'clock. Re-

Rice said the wind then lifted and blew down a tree at the

home of Ralph Fosher, north of th en placed behind bars.

U. S. 36

be-

tween the capsule and the aircraft carrier Wasp’s recovery

in the north Putnam f oroM j n the splash area be-

tween Florida and Bermuda. McDivitt and White requested

a helicopter pickup.

The Wasp made quick calculations and reported the capsule bobbing in three to four foot swells. The carrier was 48

miles away.

Four minutes before splashdown. McDivitt and White broke through the radio “blackout” zone caused by the superheat of their re-entry into the earth’s atmosphere and established voice contact with the

Wasp.

The Wasp radioed that the pilots said they were “feeling

great.”

Except for falling short of tha target zone, everything ap-

He was taken to the Putnam peared on schedule at the wind-

County Hospital for treatment

He then raced around the

town in his automobile and finally pulled into a service station after firing several shots.

In the meantime. Sheriff

Kenneth Knauer and the State Police Post at Putnamville had

notified of the man’s

strange behavior.

Five state troopers, Sheriff Knauer and Deputy Paul Mason made quick trips to Bainbridge. The Hendricks County sheriff

was also on the scene.

Officers fired one warning shot and Youngblood jumped out of his car and started firing

1973. the program involves the freshments.

transformation and development of the curriculum plus acquiring funds for five new campus buildings, enlargement of the endowment to increase further faculty salaries and student scholarships, and capital monies for property acquisition, campus beautification and renovation of existing buildings.

Ralph P. Crousore. H. P. Willard E. Silvey, Secretary. NOW YOU KNOW By United Pres* International

The world’s tallest living thing, a redwood tree in Humboldt County. Calif., is 367.8 feet high with a girth of 44 feet.

5 Soldiers Killed

LOURENCO. MARQUES, Mozambique UPI — Rebel infil-

trators killed five Portuguese Funeral services for Clem soldiers in fighting in northern McCammack. 81. well known Mozambique, the armed forces Belle Union resident, were held

said here Sunday.

C. McCammack

Services Held Funeral sendees for

Gets Largest Grant WASHINGTON UPI — New York City will receive the largest single grant to date under

up of the 62-orbit flight that was America's longest and most dramatic venture into

space.

At 12:44 p. m. EDT. the maneuvering rockets were fired over Hawaii. This slowed the craft from its 17.500-mile anhour orbital speed and brought them into a lower path. Over Guapmas, Mexico, the four powerful retro-rockets were kicked in. This put the craft into the glide path toward splash-

Among the new structures nac.

according to the World Alma- the administration’s anti-pover-

ty program — $9,183,616.

Monday afternoon at 2:00 p.m. at the Whitaker Funeral Home in Greencastle. Rev. Allen Reynolds officiated. Interment down.

was in Walnut Chapel Ceme- Because a computer failed. t er y • McDivitt could not control tha Pallbearers were: Keith Me- bird, as Project Mercury astroCammack, Glen Neier, Kendall nauts did before him. let gravity Nichols. Morris G. Ogles, Clyde pull him down without using

Stringer and Dr. Fred Stringer, the control.-.

Mr. McCammack passed The Wasp, steaming full away at the Putnam County speed toward the hobbling cap-

Hospital Saturday afternoon sule - reported

it should reach

the capsule at 2:45 p. m. EDT and hoist it out of the water. The crew was being fished out of the sea by helicopter and taken to the Wasp where a brass band, a red carpet and — best of all — razors and hot showers were waiting. Neither man has shaved or washed since liftoff from Cape Kennedy at 11:16 a. m. EDT Thursday. The official time for the splashdown was 1:12.30 p.m. EDT, a half minute earlier than the. 1:13 EDT time originally

announced.

A raft and swimmers from a helicopter were in the water to get an “eyeball” check on

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mali- how the pilots looked and felt,

coat were hurt when he lost control of his automobile, west of the bridge just east of Bainbridge on U. S 36. Sunday af-

ternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Malicoat were taken to the Putnam County Hospital where they were treated and released. Deputy Sheriff Percy Rice and State Trooper John Danberry were the investigating

officers.

where he had been a patient

since Wednesday.

He was born January 29. 1884 in Belle Union and had spent all his life in that community where he was a retired farmer. He was a member of the MillCreek Baptist Church. Survivors are: his wife. Flora Dorsett McCammack. two sisters. Mrs. Irene Grubb. Greencastle and Mrs. Mabel Powell,

Logansport.

Two Hurt In Auto Accident

Weather Cloudy, Warmer

Mostly cloudy with occasional showers or thunderstorms today and tonight. Tuesday partly cloudy and a little warmer. High today in upper 70s. Low tonight in low 60s. High Tues-

day in middle 80s.

Outlook for Wednesday: Partly cloudy, warm and humid

..... ■ ■■.. ... SURPRISE CITATION WINNER Surprise winner of DePauw alumni citation, Mrs. Clyde E. Wildman. Greencastle, receives congratulations from President William E. Kerstetter.

Damage to the Malicoat car was estimated at $600.

with showers storms likely.

and thunder-

Actress Dies

Minimum 6 a. m.

60’ 60*

NEW YORK UPI — Judy

7 a. m.

63*

Holliday, the dazzling dumb

8 a. m.

70®

blonde of the Broadway stage

9 a. m.

71®

and movies, died early today at

9 a. m.

71®

Mt. Sinai Hospital after a long

10 a. m.

71*

illness.

11 a. m.

71*

She would have been 44 on

12 noon ....

66’

June 21.

1 p. m. _

73®

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