The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 June 1965 — Page 7

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Plaque Problem NEWYORK UPI — Interior Secretary Stuart Udall Monday presented New York City with a plaque designating Manhattan’s Central Park as a national historic landmark but now tha question is what to do with it. Parks Commissioner Newbold Morris said to put the plaque

| where it belongs — in the park ' of thieves who have an open

—- would only invite vandals. He said so many plaques had been stolen from the park recently he'll probably keep Udall's in his office under lock

and key.

door policy.

Residents of three new homes complained that two men and a woman with a pickup truck came to their homes and carted away the front door.

Open Door Policy

i The home owners said the thieves told them the doors

FREMSONT, Calif. UPI —Po- were to be refinished. But that lice here are looking for a gang was the last seen of them.

RCPUtLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES, plus one winner, get together In Washington at the Republican powwow to root out issues to jostle the Johnson administration for the 1966 elections. From left, and needing no introduction: Barry Goldwater, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M. N’ v <">n and Thomas E. Dewey.

Tape Recorder Ban Continues HIGHLAND UPI—The Highland Town Board Monday night reiterated its ban on the use of tape recorders by members of the news media. The board voted 4-1 to continue the ban which went into effect May 17. The lone dissenter was the board’s only Republican member, Charles Li-

otta.

Liotta then introduced his own motion which would have permitted the use of the tape recorders, but it died for lack of a second. The issue first arose at the board’s meeting May 1, when editor Ronald Johnson of the ■ weekly Calumet Press of Highland took a tape recorder to the meeting and recorded the : events. At the May 17 meeting Board President David Morrow said the recorder would have to go. | However, Johnson was allowed to finish taping that meeting. After the vote Monday night,

Morrow said Johnson was not to bring the recorder back. He said the reason for the ban was because “town officials have the right to be protected against inaccurate information as much

as anyone else.”

Board attorney Thomas Smith

of Highland read a statement at the beginning of the meeting in i which he cited a New York, court decision stating that a “governing body could legally-

determine its own rulings.” Johnson said after the meet-

ing that he protests the ban under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constiution and under provisions of the Indiana Con-

stitution's Bill of Rights. “We feel that the truth of

what transpired at a public meeting is indeed public busi-

ness,” he said.

Johnson cited a California court decision which upheld the use of the machines and said they were the same as pens or pencils for newsmen. “Recorders are not a nuisance if they lead to accuracy—their use should be encouraged,” he

said.

Two Rockets Were Located

CAMP ATTERBURY UPI — Maj. Gen. John S. Anderson, Indiana Adjutant General, said Monday two rocket missiles mis sing after an Ohio Air National Guard F-84 fighter plane landed ' here Saturday ware located. Anderson said the rockets were identified positively Monday afternoon as having come i from the plane which missed them after a flight from Toledo,

Ohio.

The objects are each 30 j inches long and are used in air- i to-ground firing. They were found at a firing range here j j within 200 feet of the target area and identified by serial

numbers.

Although me rockets were not armed with warheads, authorities considered them dangerous and had notified persons living in Jay, Randolph, Henry, Rush, Shelby, and Earthlomew I Counties to be cautious if they ! found the missiles.

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana 7 Tuesday, June 8, 1965

NEW TRIAL AFTER 33 YEARS IN PRISON—The Rev Carl Bmgert, 65, is shown in Grand Rapids, Mich , with a nieca. Mra. Dorothy Coykendall. where he went for the new trial grant* ed to Henry Bedford (shown), who has served 33 years is the triple slaying of Bengert’s wife and two children. Badford. 75. argues he was a “quickie justice” victim. Say* Bengert, pastor of tha Broadway Baptist Church in Pompano, Fla., 'I bear him no ill will, I bear him no good will."

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