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

Man's First Space Photo Of Mars

MARS “FIRST" — This is man’s first spac® photo of another planet, Mars, made from a distance of 10,500 miles and radioed 135,000,000 miles back to Earth. The darkness of *pace is at top. The area photographed is about 200 miles long and shows a bright desert area known as Elysium.

spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wells. Last week callers on Mrs. Ida Day and Charley were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peterson of DeKalb, HI., and Mr. and Mrs. Willie Phillips. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Koesslar and daughter, Loretta, spent Friday through Sunday at the Square Dancers campers weekend at Van Bibber. They met friends from several states, among them some schoolmates they hadn’t met since 1942. The afternoons were spent learning new dance steps, and evenings were spent with wiener roasts, singspiration and dancing. Sunday morning they had a duck square dance in the water. Mr. and Mrs. John Grimes, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Grimes and son, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bunten and children, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Gossett and Carl attended the Norman reunion Sunday at Robe Ann Park. Last week Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Venice Lewis on a vacation trip to Cherokee Village,

Arkansas.

The Beechwood Pleasant Circle met Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Lora Pickett. Eighteen members and one guest, Mrs. Emily Owens, answered roll call with “Expressions Seldom Used.” Mrs. Helen Knetzer read a very interesting paper on St. Mary’s of the Woods

The three daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Orval Odell had a surprise anniversary celebration for their parents’ 25th wedding anniversary at the Westview Christian Church in Indianapolis July 3rd. Mrs. Byron Kelley was a guest. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Tharp and children left by plane for their new home in New York, Sunday. They had visited a week with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Kelley spent Sunday in Stilesville with his mother, Mrs. Roxie Kelley. Circle 1, W.S.C.S. met Thursday night with Rev. Charles Stantz giving the lesson. Following the meeting the hostesses, Mrs. Esther Quick and Mrs. Thelma Wright served tasty refreshments. Mrs. Hallie Connors has been visiting Mrs. Elsie Ruark. Scott Coffin left Saturday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Venice Lewis and son, Norman, in Indianapolis.

licity precluded his offering

them.

The highlight of his speech was an appeal to the United Nations to persuade the Peking and Hanoi authorities to come to the conference table, an achievement eluding Washing-

ton to date.

Perhaps the delegates understood the manner of his appear-

ance there.

Speech Switched

An appearance by the president of the United States is a carefully planned thing. U.N. of-

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Saturday, July 17, 1965 HOLLYWOOD NEWS Television Is Programmed For Younger Audience

By Rick Du Brow

| Rhythm, rather than words,

HOLLYWOOD UPI — With write the Winicks, is the chief the growing purchasing power ingredient in nursery rhymes

ficials proceeded on the under- ; of young people, and the deci- like Mother Goose, as well as standing that Johnson would sion to turn network television the main ingredient in youngspeak at the concluding session entertainment into a children’s sters’ street chants which seem of the ceremonies at the San medium, analysts of the child to have a near-universal tern-

society are now free to work ; po.

on the whole country.

Johnson Image Needs Retouching

UNITED NATIONS UPI — Although Communist propaganda against Washington's Viet Nam and Dominican policies has barely denied U.S. prestige here, there seems to be

Catholic school at Terre Haute, agreement that the delegates’ Mrs. Charles Smith was absent image of President Johnson

but she sent contests which were given by Mrs. Mary Lou

Dudley. Hostess served delic- Q enera i

ious refreshments. The August meeting will be wdth Mrs.

Esther Quick.

Rock ‘n’ roll shows such as ABC-TV’s “Shindig’ ’and NBCTV’s “Hullabaloo,’’ for ini stance, are clear enough in

“Television’s stress on rhythm meets many of the so same basic needs — by the sound of commercials, program signatures, musical auditory

Francisco Opera House.

Suddenly plans were switched, permitting the President to speak on Friday, instead of

Saturday.

For a speech by an ordinary

man, this would make little dif- | their p Urpose But beyond the cues like those for excitement, ference. But the two dozen or artistis ^ to gpeak and fi _ the repetitive rhythms and so delegates who had been j nancial levels, an immense semi-abstract qualities of carscheduled originally to speak i field of analysis ig now open to toons," they add, elaborating.

those who would have it, and I am thinking here of an essay distributed last year by Charles and Mariann P. Winick, who have w r ritten other pieces about

children and television.

before the President now were forced to hold up their preparations. When the President speaks, it is likely those who come later will want to com-

ment on his remarks.

There was an awhward moment when somebody's timing

“Television," they wrote in

needs retouching.

went off at the Opera House. this Particular essay, “is less

The opening ceremonies were

their red lights expectantly. A

senses are so un-

Johnson has appeared before wait of almost 20 minutes fol-

delegates

Assembly

twice as president.

On Dec. 17, 1964, he earned | their sympathy as successor to

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Tanksley f, . rvuto,, (the recently assassinated John

F. Kennedy and excited their enthusiasm with a pledge to

and children spent Friday until Sunday with Mrs. Avaril Huller. Susie, Marsha and Patty Newhirk are spending the week

here with their grandmother. Mrs. Ethel Ruark left July 4

for Mansfield, Ohio to visit her

son, Dorris, and children.

make world peace, civil rights success of America’s Marinerand human welfare “not an il- 4 has caused rockets to lose lusion but a reality." | their political power and bow Last June 26, his appearance to peaceful uses. “We pay our before the assembly’s 20th anni- greatest respects to,the United

Fillmore News By Mrs. Charles ?nilth Fillmore Correspondent Mrs. Martha Norman is visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Grimes. The Garden Club picnic was cancelled Friday because of

rain.

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Newman of Sedalia. Mo., were overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. Forest Williamson and sons, Tracy and

Jerry, Tuesday, July 6. Mr. and | Mrs. Harry Elliott of Groveland i spent Tuesday evening w r ith them. Tracy returned Tuesday I from a 10 day visit in Missouri. Following seven weeks intensive R.O.T.C. training at Summer Camp, Fort Sill, Okla., Caj det Lieutenant Joe Shipman will reach home about Aug. 1st to spend four weeks with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Shipman. Then he will return to Springfield. Mo., where he

will enter his senior year at Southwest Missouri State College. Mrs. Shirley Wilson and Mrs. Bonnie Edwards of Marion spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Edith McKamey. Mrs. Lena Bryan, Lee Wells and Mrs. Mary Evans visited Mrs. Julia Wheeler at Avon Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Wheeler is recovering from surgery. Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Cunningham and daughter, Susie,

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Meek v ersary commemoration at San States for having lit the light are the parents of a son born Francisco provided no occasion f° r human beings reaching far ! Wednesday at the Putnam f°r sympathy and afforded little into s P ace > ’ the

County Hospital.

Mrs. Ruth Carpenter was a patient in the Methodist Hos-

| pital last week.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ruark

, opportunity for enthusiasm. Expect Dramatic Speech Most delegates had expected

a dramatic speech from the President. Many were confident

“It is possible that the extraordinary popularity of rock-and-roll music among young people is a regression, during preadolescence and adolescence, to a Mother Goose level of auditory satisfaction. It may be occuaring because a kind of

likely to appeal to children sensosy homeostasis a rela-

disposed of, the assembly presi-1 mere, y because it is available lively stable state of equilibdent had made his remarks, and than 11 Ls to do so rium operates to reinforce the the television cameras blinked meets the overwhelming needs auditory sense at a time when

of children for stimulation via the other seeing and hearing.” Discuss- developed.’

ing hearing, they added: j “A major loss in our society has been the substitution of noise for sound. Urban chil-1 dren never learn the ability to 5

TOKYO UPI — The Japan- ; distinguish the sounds of an acese newspaper Sankei said the tivity like birds’ singing. In ad-

dition, the traditional rhythms of non-urban life are as absent today as they are from the mu- I sic of contemporary composers like John Cage. Children, and especially young children, have j a need to respond to sound on

newspaper the level of rhythms that they

I can duplicate."

lowed before Johnson was ush-

ered to the podium. Praise Mariner 4

said.

Route 40 Riders HORSE SHOW Sunday, July 18

12 Noon

WATTS ARENA

AT PUTNAMVILLE

No Admission

The July 7 meeting of the Stitch and Chatter Club was cancelled because of illness. It will meet July 21, 7:30 p.m. 'with Mrs. Madelyn Kelley.

GRAND OPENING

»

Continues Thur Sunday July 18th Cochran's SUNOCO Service 505 N. Jackson ST. Phone OL3-9837 Jim Cochran - Manager

and family of Greencastle spent | he would announce a U.S. conThe Fourth holiday with Mr. cession in the U.N. political inland Mrs. Hershell Ruark and p asse over financial problems if other relatives. not, indeed, a sizable monetary

contribution to solve them. Although U.S. press advisers cautioned against predicting what Johnson would say, several dispatches forecast a financial concession, an offer for mutual scrapping with Russia of a determined number of nuclear warheads, or a move for peace

in Viet Nam.

The President offered none of these and whispers were passed by close students of the LBJ mystique that the eadvance pub-

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115 NORTH JACKSON STREET

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

013-5178