The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 November 1965 — Page 2
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Th« Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Monday, November 1, 1965
Discussions Prove Spirited
HOLLYWOOD UPI — Fireworks flew Tuesday night in CBS-TV's transatlantic program in which students questioned former President Dwight Eisenhower, U. N. Ambassador Arthur Goldberg and Solicitor General Thurgood Marshall. The one - hour broadcast, taped earlier in the day via the Early Bird satellite for the network’s “Town meeting of the World” series, included questions from students in London and Paris, from behind the Iron Curtain in Belgrade, and from Mexico City. If some of the questions revealed fantastic misconceptions, and if some of the answers were less than satisfactory, the hour nevertheless was tremendous experience in the potential power and real value of such face - to - face confrontations. One such program each week would save the television season and make it worthwhile. As for the students, some of their questions were courteously put, some were good, some
were as depressing as a predictable political writer, and some were just plain hostile, making one wonder whether CBS-TV applied as much attention to intelligent selection of its young guests as it might have. While there were a few 7 sharply phrased questions from Belgrade, it w'as, ironically, from the countries of our allies that the most hostile questions and attitudes came. One BritI ish student, a young man, replying to an Eisenhower answer, said: “What are you talking about?” To Eisenhower, Goldberg and Marshall, in Washington with moderator Charles Collingwood, the students put questions involving Viet Nam, the Dominican Republic, racil matters and Barry Goldwater. Often, the hositle students, and the incredible misconceptions, left themselves wide open to sophisticated replies, but just as often the answers — chiefly in the first half of the program — were equally argumentative when they should have shown polish and wit.
THK DAILY lANNSt AND HKRALD CONSOLIDATED 24-28 S. Jackson Si. GrMReastto. Ind. Businoss Phono Ol 3-5151 Elixaboth Raridon Estato, Publish or S. R. Raridon, Sonior Editor Norma HilL Gon. Mgr. Jamas B. Zois, Managing Editor William D. Hoepor, Adv. Mgr. Entorod in fha Post Offico at Groancaitlo, Indiana, a* Second Clan Mail mattor under Act of March 7, 1B7S. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 40c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. $8.00 per yeat Outside of Putnam Ca. $10.00 per year Outside of Indiana $14.00 per year
HE HELPS THE VIET CONG—Jeff Gordon, a national co-ordin-ator of the May Second Movement, tells reporters in New York about the organization’s efforts to help the Viet Cong in Viet Nam—by sending blood and first aid supplies. And he says they plan to sell their blood and send proceeds, too,
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Answer to Saturday’e Puzzle
ACROSS 1-Sow 6-Seeds 9- Resort 12- Toward the sheltered tide 13- Ox of Celebes 14- Crony (colloq.) 16- Game fish 17- Symbol for tantalum 18- Macaw 19- Genus of maples 21 - Evaluates 23- Frightens suddenly 27- Pronoun 28- Commonplace 29- Chck beetle 31-Ocean 34- Faroe Islands whirlwind 35- Music: as written 37- Marry 39 -Conjunction 40. Wooden pin 42-Crafty 44-Scorches 46- Printer's measure 48- M immize 60- Musical organizations 63- Walk in water 64- Mohammedan name 55-Symbol for tantalum 57- Domestic servant 61 • Meadow 62-Competent 64- Exact 65- Pigeon pea 66- Alcoholic beverage 67- Purpose DOWN 1- Posed for portrait 2- Guido's high note 8-Without end ipeet.) 4-Leaves
5- Jury list 6- Preposition 7- Small child 8- District in Germany 9- Freshets 10- Peel 11- Word of sorrow 16-Group of eight (pi.) 20-Communist 22-Part of “to be” 33-Cease 24- Woody plant 25- Three-toed sloth 26- Seed 30-Dwell 32- Nobleman 33- The caama 36- Priest's vestment 38-Pawls 4i Gracious 43-Evergreen shrub 45-Near
47-Physician (abbr.) 49- More crippled 50- Hairless 51- Appellation of Athena 52- Pierce
66- Man’s nickname 58- Man’s name 59- Diving bird 60- Confederate general 63-French article
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Bible Thought Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life, whereunto thou art also called, and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses. I Timothy 6:12. The good fight of faith is a ceaseless war against evil, a ceaseless struggle for that which is good, and a ceaseless effort to exalt the lordship of Jesus Christ in the earth. Personal And Local News Active Tri-Kappa will meet with Mrs. Howard Harmless Tuesday, November 2 at 8 p.m. Over The Teacup Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Howard Harmless Tuesday Nov. 2, at 2:00. Delta Theta Tau will meet Tuesday at 8 o'clock with Mrs. Tom Swope, with Mrs. Ben Hoover as assisting hostess. Fathers Auxiliary No. 1 of the Veterans of Foreign Wars will meet Wednesday night at the Gen. Jesse M. Lee Post 1550 Home. Castle Toppers Home Demonstration Club will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carl Myers. There will be a lesson. All members are urged to attend. The Thursday Reading Club will meet November 4th at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Helen Jones. Mrs. Herberta Sutton will have the program. Steven Campbell, 21, Greencastle, Route 5, was arrested by City Officer Bill Mnsten at 1:22 this morning on East Washington Street for false registration. City firemen made a run in the township fire truck at 8:10 Saturday night to the Earl Foxx home near Mt. Olive Church, southwest of Greencastle. They reported a grass fire. Jack O. Greathouse, 37, South Bend, escaped from the State Farm Sunday night, the State Police Post at Putnamville reported this morning. Greathouse was serving a term for intoxication. Members of Kappa Delta Phi Sorority please note the regular scheduled meeting of Tuesday, Nov. 2nd has been cancelled. Instead we will celebrate Kappa Delta Phi’s Founder’s Day with the Clinton Chapter in Clinton, Indiana on Nov. 4th. Fortnightly Club will meet at the home of Miss Edith Browning, 401 East Seminary St., at 7:30 p.m. tonight. Mrs. Mary Shaw will assist the hostess. The program will be in charge of Mrs. Marie Porter.” Young Mothers Study Club will meet at Eitels Wednesday evening at 7:30. Following a demonstration the meeting will be held at Wilma Proctor’s. Members are urged to bring a guest. There will be no plant exchange at this time. A training session on “Your Den and meetings” will be held Nov. 2nd at 7:30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church. 110 So. College for all new Den Mothers.. Cub Masters, Committee men, and any one wanting Cub Scout basic training in Clay and Putnam County.
Joseph Kerr, 218 Hillsdale, Ave., entered the Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis, Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Hess wish to announce the marriage of their daughter Barbara Jean, to Pvt. Jerry Sanders, son of Mr. and Mrs. DeVee Sanders of Hadley, Ind. The informal wedding was held at the Danville Nazarene Church at 2:00 p.m., Sat., Oct. 30, 1965.
Mrs. Schafer Hostess To PutnamviUe WSCS The W.S.C.S. of the Putnamville Church met with Mrs. George Schafer on Wednesday evennig, October 27. Mrs. Henry Woodall was co-hostess. The president, Mrs. Tom Fisher, called the meeting to order. Twelve members answered roll call with their favorite Bible verse. Plans were made for a bake sale to be held December 3. Mrs. E. J. Jackson gave the program, entitled “Come Ye Apart.” Mrs. Allison Bridges had charge of the program on prayer and self-denial. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostesses and Mrs. Tom Fisher was winner of door prize.
Hoosfcrs Enjoy Mild Weather By United Press International November arrived in Indiana today with mild weather still prevailing and likely to continue through the week. October’s final day Sunday featured high temperatures ranging from 56 at South Bend to 74 at Evansville. For the arrival of the new month, the mercury dipped to 29 at Evansville and 30 at Cincinnati and Lafayette. Elsewhere, it was above freezing, including 33 at Louisville, 35 at Fort Wayne and South Bend, and 42 at Indianapolis. Highs today were expected to be in the upper 50s and lows tonight in the low to mid 30s. Then warmer weather will arrive Tuesday, with highs in the mid 60s throughout the state. After that, there will be only minor changes in temperature through Saturday, and the temperatures will average 4 to 6 degrees above normal highs of 55 to 64 and normal lows of 37 to 42, the five-day outlook said. A string of rainless days continued, reaching nine at midnight Sunday. Little or no rain was expected this week. The total will be one-tenth of an inch or less, with “light showers about Wednesday or Saturday," the outlook said. Sunny skies featured the weekend and more of the same were forecast at least through Wednesday.
FAMILY ROLE HOLLYWOOD UPI— Max von Sydow, who played Christ in “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” will work with his sons, Clas, 12 and Henrik, 7, who will play his sons in “Hawaii.”
Eight Die In State Traffic By United Prets International Indiana emerged from a 54hour weekend period with less than a double-figure traffic toll today, the first time the mark was under 10 in weeks. At least eight persons lost their lives in Hoosier accidents. The weekend tally pushed the figure for the year to at least 1.217, compared with 1,138 a year ago. A baby was killed and eight other persons injured, none seriously. Sunday when a tire blew out on a car driven by Alonzo Brown, 45, Evanston, 111. The car veered off the right side of U.S. 41 near Attica and swerved back into the path of a big truck driven by James W. Crocker, 38, Birmingham, Ala, Carmelia Winn, 1, daughter of Brown, was killed. James Berg, 37, Noblesville, was killed early Sunday when his auto ran into a train at a crossing on Indiana 37 just east of Noblesville. Three victims were reported Saturday, including Wayne J. McBride, 35, R. R. 1, Laotto, killed when his pickup truck went out of control on a DeKalb County road near Garrett. Shirley Lyons, 17, Etna Green, was killed Saturday afternoon in a car-truck crash west of Warsaw on U.S. 30. In a bizarre crash Saturday, Charles Grooms, Jr., 24. Indianapolis, was killed when his auto collided headon with a
MAY BE $500,000 ITEM—This 26-inch stucco bust of a girl holding a bouquet was bought at an auction by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York for $225, and was part of the collection of Mrs. A. Hamilton Rice. Now experts believe it to be the work of the immortal Leonardo Da Vinci, which puts the worth up to say $500,000. Examining it are John J. Phillips (left), the museum’s curator of Western European Arts, and James J. Roruner, museum director.
SUPPORT ^o c , 4 , YOUR /V** \ MENTAL 1 My
HEALTH
ASSOCIATION
County Hospital Dismissed Saturday: Mrs. Wendell Winks and daughter, Plainfield Charles Manley, Spencer Katherine Dunn, Gosport Sandra George, Amo Mrs. William Weist and daughter, Cloverdale Grace Sackett, Cloverdale James Bales, Cloverdale Buford Phillips, Fillmore Tom Best, Greencastle Walter Feld, Greencastle Frank Vermillion, Greencastle Marie Aker, Greencastle Norma Bruner, Greencastle Births: Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Austin, Quincy, Route 2, a girl, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Arvel Hinton, Poland, Route 2, a girl, Sunday. Dismissed Sunday: John Awbrey, Quincy Robert Gilliam, Indianapolis Patricia McCord, Greencastle
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truck on Interstate 74 in Marion County. Police said Grooms drove almost 19 miles down the wrong side of the express-
way.
The first victims of weeekend accidents were killed Friday night. Sandra Gaines, 20. Charlestown, was killed when her auto plunged down an embankment along Indiana 62 north of her home, while two-vehicle crashes claimed the lives of Richard Williams, 36, Elwood, and Leslie Vanasdall, 43. Knox.
Communist elements fomenting rebellion in central Java. “If you cannot combat these counter - revolutionaries, then you needn't be soldiers and wear the uniform,” Brig. Gen. Surjo Sumpeno said in an order broadcast by the official Indonesian news agency Antara. Sumpeno told a military roll call that conditions in the Surakarta area were deteriorating daily as roaming bands of Communist youths kidnaped and slaughtered villagers belonging to rival religious and nation-
alist groups.
At least 250 persons were reported killed in the Bojolall area of central Java alone since the Oct. 1 coup attempt. Martial law and strict curfews
JAKARTA UI — An Indon- were maintained in central esian army general today or- Java and its special district of dered his troops to .wipe out Jogjakarta.
Orders Wipe Out *! Of Red Elements
Card of Thanks We gratefully acknowledge [ and thank our relatives, friends and neighbors for their expressions of sympathy extended to us at the time of the accident and death of our beloved son and brother, Jim Jr. We are especially grateful to Dr.’s Steele and Thompson, Putnam Co. Hospital, Rev. Sam Kirk, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Hopkins of Hopkins and Walton Funeral Home, and the classes of ’65 and ’67, Greencastle High School. Mr. and Mrs. James Simmerman and family
Pan Fried CHICKEN Every TUESDAY All You Can Eat
$1.25
Starting At 4.P.M.
Drink, Hot
Biscuit* and Honey
THAT WOULD-BE PLANE HIJACKER—Luis Medina Perez, 21, is smirking and Monroe County Sheriff Rease Thompson grins as he takes Perez to the lockup in Key West, Fla., after the Cuban refugee's attempt to hijack a Miami-to-Key West National Airlines plane. He was desperate to get his family out of Cuba. Lower: The crew, on whom Perez held a pellet gun until they overpowered him, was (from left) pilot Ken I. Carlile, stewardess Gail Vanderhayden, and copilot D. S. McDaniel. Perez is from Union City, NJ.
TOUR’S South of Greencastle at U. S. 40
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Some light on a dark subject
Ever wonder why some pills come in clear, transparent bottles, while others hide behind brownordark-green glass? It’s no accident, but by design. Why... ? Simple daylight can reduce the potency of some medications. Consider how sunshine fades a rayon print, for instance. Thus, where needed, we use dark bottles, not to hide anything, but to preserve the medical effectiveness of the drug your physician prescribed for you. This is but one of many precautionary measures that are taken to provide you with the best in pharmaceutical service.
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