The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 August 1965 — Page 3
ladies' Day At Indiana Fair INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Showers threatened to take up where chilly weather left oft today as a stumbling bock to attendance at the Indiana State Fair. However, nothing dampened the spirits of a hardy band of
.thousands of falrgoers who refused to let weather interfere with their fun. I It was Ladies’ Day for the * third day of the 113th annual exposition, which featured a baton twirling contest, selection of the grand champion 4-H steer and sale of the grand champion 4-H barrow*. Attendance at the first two days of the fair totaled more
than 37.000, compared with 23,000 in the corresponding period last year. Weekend features included the crowning of Theresa K. Smith, Versailles, as Miss Indiana State Fair in a contest which drew 70 entries from all around the state. Governor Branigan officially opened the fair Saturday morning, saluting 4-H clubs as “one of the great youth movements of all time.”
jbtAtde WASHINGTON MARCH OF EVENTS
IKE S SUPPORT OF VIET j GOLDBERG GETS CREDIT POLICY SHAKES GOPers | FOR SELLING LBJ VIEWS
By HENRY CATHCAKT Central Press Washington Writer WASHINGTON—Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s re-endorsement of President Lyndon B. Johnson's policies toward Viet Nam and the decision to abandon the fight over United Nations dues has sent a shock wave through the conservative wing of the Republican party. To the dismay of many in this faction, it smacks of repudiation of their efforts to build a political issue for next year's campaign effort. At the same time, Eisenhower’s statements seem to run contrary to some he has made on the same matters in recent days. On the surface, at least, he almost appears to be con-
tradicting himself.
Democratic leaders count the latest develop-
ment as a significant plus for their own political effort next year. They now have the endorsement of the GOP's most popular figure to two of the more controversial foreign policy
matters currently before the public. The credit for this political coup rightly be-
longs to President Johnson. He took the initiaFormer president live to send U. S. ambassador to the United listened Nations, Arthur Goldberg, to Gettysburg to give Ike a complete run-down on the situation at the UN. explaining the reasons behind the change in U. S. policy on dues. Goldberg did his homework well and was able to convince the former president of the necessity for the
new’ policy.
Johnson, too, has gone far more than half way in updating Ike on conditions in Viet Nam, both military and political. Again, the president was able to convince his predecessor of the need for a non-partisan united front. But the political effect of all this will be felt for a long time
to come.
* • • • • WHERE NEXT?—President Johnson has been getting a lot of mileage out of selecting unusual places to sign important legislation—also some not so important. It began when he decided to put his show on the road and sign the school bill in his ow r n Texas schoolhouse. That went over so well that when time came to sign the medicare bill he took to the road again and did the chore wuth much fanfare in Harry Truman’s Independence, Mo. Then, in rapid succession he signed the health bill at the National Institutes of Health and the voting rights measure in the old Supreme Court chamber in the
Capitol.
All this is excellent showmanship that has raised the signing ceremony to a major public relations event. But it has also been the subject of some select Wash- Rood Show ington cocktail party chatter. _ _ The game has to do with outlandish bills to * be signed in outlandish places. Some of them, of New Game course, aren’t fit to print. One, printable, which comes to mind immediately is the idea of Johnson himself orbiting in a space ship as he signs the measure appopriating funds for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. You can take it from there.
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Bucky Baker, 25, Rochester Minn., a bronco ridei who appeared in a Saturday night contest, was injured when his mount threw him. He was taken to a hospital in satisfactory condition. Other winners included: Pigeons - Carl Watson, Marion, grand champion. Sheep shearing, 4-H corriedale - John Merlan, New Palestine, senior division: Paula Egenoff, Greenwood, junior division. Vegetable judging - Darrel Hall, Bedford, potato sweepstakes: Martha Windhorst, Greenw’ood, pumpkins and squash: Mrs. , Mark Kingen, Muncie, tomatoes; Neal Stuckw’ish. Vallonia, watermelons; Robert Ridge. Butler, best display; Robert Servse, New Market, market basket.
King Enrolls Five Children ATLANTA UPI — Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and his top assistant in the civil rights movement today enrolled five of their children in a prevoiusly all-white elementary school. King's wife brought two of her children, and Mrs. Ralph Abernathy, whose husband is vice president of King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference iSCLCt, enrolled three of her children in the Spring Street school. The enrollment of the children took place without incident. They were among thousands of Negro youngsters w r ho took their seats today in previously all-white schools as classes began. It was the first massive desegregation of schools since the U.S. Supreme Court ordered an end of classroom discrimination in 1954. Martin Luther King, III, and Yolanda were enrolled at Spring Street where the children of many prominent Atlanta families attend, along with Donza. Juanta and Ralph Abernathy, III.
“MOST WANTED" —Add to the FBI’s list of ‘Ten Most Wanted’’ fugitives Holice Paul Black (above), accused of the fatal shooting of a Chicago policeman during an armed robbery. Black is 21, weighs 175, is 6 feet tall. He has a scar on his left hand.
ALL’S SMILES—Henry Cabot Lodge (right) and MaJ. Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu, chairman of the South Viet
mittee, have a laugh in S gon, where Lodge presen his credentials as the U
A To hear her tell It, Pauline Cushman [-»] was the greatest heroine of the war. She was telling it far and wide the autumn of ’65, in a triumphal tour. Pauline Cushman, bom at New Orleans in 1833, shouldn’t be confused with another actress, Charlotte Saunders Cushman, born at Boston in 1816. It’s likely that the fame of Charlotte as opera singer and actress in drama was Pauline’s inspiration to escape frontier Michigan, where Pauline’s father then had a trading post among the Chippewas. The Indians called her Laughing Breeze. Soon after teenage, Pauline ran away to New York. She breezed right into leading roles with her youthful attractiveness to John McDonough, a forerunner of John Barrymore as matinee idol. They didn’t get married, though. Pauline had her own troupe when, in 1863, she interpolated a toast to the Confederate cause in the midst of a starring role at a Louisville, Ky., theater, and was “fired.” In actuality, she was serving the cause of handsome William Truesdail, chief of espionage for W. S. Rosecrans’ Army of Cumberland. The furor in Louisville got her a reception among Confederates and access to information Truesdail wanted. First time she was caught, Pauline had such an effect on Gen. John Hunt Morgan, he freed her..Next time, a less responsive general let her be sentenced to hanging. She was saved by Union capture of the town. This and more figured in performances in
which the “Heroine of the North” acted out how she fooled or befuddled Rebel officers. Pauline couldn’t go on being a heroine forever. And she made unfortunate investments and marriages. Years later, no longer attractive or an attraction, and impoverished, she committed suicide in San Francisco. The G.A.R. gave her an enormous funeral and a big gravestone engraved "Pauline Cushman, Federal Spy . . .” CLARK KINNAIRD.
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Monday, August 30,1965
Clash Of Wills In Greek Crisis ATHENS UPI — The Green political crisis reverted today to its status as a “collision course” clash of wills between young King Constantine and former Premier George Papan-
dreou, 77.
Constantine's third choice to succeed Papandreou, Premier Elias Tsirimokos, resigned from office Sunday when his government was beaten on a vote of confidence in parliament. The vote was 159-135. Tsirimokos, a former Socialist, planned to confer with Constantine tonight to discuss the thorny political situation and make recommendations for forming a government capable
of ruling.
So far Papandreou, leader of the powerful Center Union party, has defeated the 25-year-old monarch’s every move to find a w’ay out of the political
impasse.
The crisis exploded July 15, when Constantine blocked Pa-1 pandreou’s bid to take over the defense ministry and accepted his resignation instead.
Ball Will Call On De Gaulle PARIS UPI — U. S. Undersecretary of State George W. Ball will call on President Charles de Gaulle Tuesday. He is expected to discuss new peace moves in Viet Nam. Informed diplomatic sources said Ball will give De Gaulle A personal message from President Johnson about the Viet
Nam situation.
Ball arrived here Saturday with Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler on the first leg of a mission to push Johnson’s plan for an international monetary conference in Europe’s main fi-
nancial centers.
But the unexpected announcement he would see De Gaulle personally gave his trip more than usual significance. During previous Paris visits Ball has called on French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville but has not asked to see De Gaulle himself.
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