The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 November 1965 — Page 2
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Th« Daily Bannar, Greaneastla, Indiana Saturday, Novambar 6, 1965
Obituary | Monday afternon at 4 o'clock the Death Angel entered our community and took from our midst a Father, neighbor and friend. Everett E. Hasten, son of Mathias and Nancy Elmore Hasten, was born in Putnam County August 6. 1884, and passed away October 11th at the Putnam County Hospital where he was admitted one week before. He was united in marriage to Iva I. Lewis Oct. 7, 1806. To this union was born seven children - Lucille. Madonna, Lee and Donus having preceded him in death. Survivors are his wife Iva. one son, Ennis “Jonny,’’ Mrs. Ernestine Wells. Mrs. Pauline Ruark, all of Greencastle, three daughters-in-law, two sons-in-law, twelve grandchildren, 13 great-grandchildren. He was quiet, gentle and kind, the memory of his patient life will always remain with us. Mr. Hasten was a life-long member of Deer Creek Primitive Baptist Church, serving as Deacon for many years. He resided on a farm where his father had lived, and remained there fifty four years. He will be remembered by his many friends and relatives, especially missed by Brothers and Sisters of his church which he served so faithfully. To those who mourn, there remains for consolation that his sufferings are forever past, to the family the sweet and tender memory of his helpfulness and hope of a happy reunion. WHERE ELSE? Where else than on the farm vors the new turned soil or or sunshine, or the wintry blast, or cattle lowing in the pasture. Who more than a farmer savors the new r turne dsoil or marks the growth of life with such interest. Who listens more intently for wind in the night or the bird's first chirp at dawn. Who witnesses a miracle greater than one who casts seed to the earth and follows it to harvest. Who knows better the frailty of new life or the fury of clouds twisting in the sky; or the tranquility after the atory. Where else than on the land is there a greater symphony of science and art, such harmony between nature, man, and God. This waa the life of E. E. Hasten.
Library Loses Its Teletype COLUMBUS, UPI— Refusal of the Bartholomew County Library Board to sign a statement of compliance with terms of the 1964 federal civil rights act has cost its library the use of a state communications net w’ork. A Teletype system partly financed with federal funds, connecting the local library with 27 others in Indiana and the state library as well, was removed from Columbus last month. Robert L. Stevenson, member of the board, said the board decided not to sign the statement because it felt it w'as not necessary since discrimination had never been practiced in any way either in the acceptance of patrons or the hiring of employes. Stevenson said the board is considering filing suit for an injunction to force the Indiana State Library to return the Teletype printed. The communications system is financed under the Health. Education and Welfare Departments administration of the Library Service and Construction Act of 1961. Stevenson said nothing was said about signing such a statement before the system was installed here. Furthermore, he said, a statement was signed on a state level assuring compliance with the civil rights act by participating libraries although the boards of those libraries w T ere not consulted.
THE DAILY BANNIt AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED 24-21 S. Jacksen SI. GrMncaitl*. Ind. Business Phone 01 3-5151 Elizabeth Rariden Estate, Publisher S. R. Rariden, Senior Editor Norma Hill. Gen. Mgr. James B. Zeis, Managing Editor William D. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as Second Class MaB matter under Act of March 7. 1878. Subscription Prices Home Delivery 40c per week Mailed in Putnam Co. $8.00 per year Outside of Putnam Co. $10.00 per year Outside of Indiana $14.00 per year
Bible Thought Repentance and remission of sins should Ire preached in His name among all nations. Luke 24:47. The message of the gospel of God’s command to repent and the promise of the forgiveness. The world needs this message more than anything else. Personal And Local News
-Rotary Club during summer football training so he w'as abl# to enjoy the sport atmosphere. Tom Scholl told of his science etudy at Standford, Califirnia, w'here electronics was his interest. Two new members: Dale Teaford, Central National Bank and Charles Johnson. DePauw Mathematics Department, were ably inducted by Jim Lovless into the Club. Guests of Rotary were Bill Ash and Gene Aker of the local high school and beaming with pride parents Harold School and Grafton Longden, Jr.
Scientists Leara Of Rare Find KANSAS CITY Mo. UPI — Finding of fossilided bacterium that existed when the Earth was only 1^ billion years old was reported at the 77th convention of the Geological Society of America by a Harvard scientist. Dr. Elso S. Barghoom. a professor of botany, said the bac-terium-found in a piece of microcrystalline chert, a form of silica—was the oldest living organism known to exist on Earth. Barghaarn said the rock was found in a gold mining area 20 miles southeast of Barberton. South Africa, in February. When the organism lived Barghoorn said, the Earth had passed only one-fourth of its present existence. "It tells us nothing about the atmosphere at that time," the scientist said, "but it does show that life could exist.
Attorney Favors Life For Ruby DALLAS UPI — Jack Ruby, condemned to death for slaying Lee Harvey Oswald, assassin of President Kennedy, should be kept alive, Dist. Atty. Henry Wade said Thursday. He said h« was willing to recommend the death sentence be commuted to life. If he got a commutation. Ruby w'ould be eligible for parole with 15 years’ prison time credit, Wade said. Ruby shot and killed Oswald as millions watched on national television Nov. 24, 1963. He was convicted of murder March 14, 1964 and sentenced to death. He has been in the Dallas County Jail since while his case was on appeal. Wade said If Ruby were an exemplary convict, he could get 15 years’ credit in eight or nine years actually spent in prison. But Ruby's lawyers do not want a commutation. They have the case in the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and are holding out for a maximum fiveyear sentence for murder without malice. Wade said Thursday at a new’s conference that there were several reasons he has changed his mind about wanting Ruby electrocuted. "One reason is that we have plenty else cases to work on,’’ Wade said. "Another reason is that we have spent $75,000;>iuo,000 on the case already and Jack Ruoy is not wortn uiat much more. "Not all the questions about uie assaoc.mai.ioii nave ueen allow ereu. some peopie are sun asking auoui it anu i. unna it oetter to nave nun avauame. r many, amiougn ne is sane, uieie is no question mai Nuu^ nas some neuruuc tendencies uiat can oe ireateu in me penitentiary. Vvaue said he did not mean ne uouoteu mat Uswalu, acting aione, kined President ivenneuj, or mat Kuby was acting aione. He said he meant, rather, that people would ask questions about the case, whether there was any basis for them or not, and it would be a good thing if Ruby were alive to answer them. But Wade said the defense’s holding out for five years was "ridiculous.” "We would be agreeable to nothing less than life imprisonment," Wade said. "From a legal standpoint, if the defense would file a petition for commutation. the prosecution could join in it.”
The Hospital Sewing Group will meet Tuesday morning at 9:30 a. m. in the basement of 1 the Nurses Home. The Better Homes Demoni stration Club will meet at the j home of Mary Ann Rowings | November 8 at 7:30 p. m. The Tuesday Reading Circle will meet with Mrs. L. H. Dirks on November 16 at 2:30 p. m. Members please note change of date. The Brick Chapel Home Demonstration Club will meet with Mrs. John Danberry, Tuesday November 9 at 1:30 p. m. There will be a Craft lesson. Thee Good Cheer Club will meet with Mrs. Wilfred Hurst ‘ on Thursday, November 11 at 11:45 a m. Bring covered dish. Remember the Kitchen gadget ! sale. The Epsilon Sigma Alpha meeting originally planned for Nov. 9 has been postponed and will be held Tuesday, November 16, 7:30 p. m. at the home of Romilda Hamontre.
Campus Calendar Tuesday, Nov. 9 Readings in English: Stephtn Vincent Benet Freedom’s A Hard-Bought Thing Reader—Fred Bergm&nn 7:00 p.m. Library Aud. Wednesday, Nov. 10 Chapel: Dr. J. Robert Nelson Oberlin School of Theology Gobin Church, 10:00 a.m. Lecture: Dr. Allen Reynolds State Univ. of N. P., “Sucrose Density Centrisutation Pharmacalagy," Minshall Aud., 4:00 p.m. Annual meeting and dinner of Putnam County DePauw U. Alumni Assoc. Union Ball Room, 6:00 p.m. Friday, Nov. 12 Chapel: Dr. Thomas Hale Hamilton. Pres, of the Univ. of Hawaii, Meharry hall, 10:00 j a.m. Lecture: “Frank Lloyd ; Wright As An Artist,” Dr. John F. Kienitz, Dept, of History, U. of Wis., Art Center, 3:30 p.m. .Orchesis Dance Concert, Meharry Hall. 8:30 p.m. Soccer: Wabash at DePauw, 4 p.m., Blackstock Field Saturday, Nov. 13 Lecture: Seminar Discussion on Non-Western Studies— Oriental Art, Dr. John F. Keinitz, Art Center Gallery, 9:00 a. m. Women’s Field Hockey, DePauw vs Ball State—McKeen Field, 10:00 a.m. Football, DePauw vs Wabash, 2:00 p.m. Orchesis Dance Concert, Meharry Hall, 8:30 p.m.
the mayor would need a crystal!
ball.
The ordinance would authorize the mayor to declare an emergency “prior to a forecast by the U. S. Weather Bureau” that a heavy sanow was on the
way.
City Attorney Russell Keith said later the wording would be changed to call for such action “after” rather than “prior to” a forecast.
India, Pakistan Stand Unchanged
Students Back Viet Nam Policy WASHINGTON UPI—Seven students from Rutgers University, where a professor’s stand against U.S policy in Viet Nam Friday came to Washington | with petitions from students supporting the administration. The group presented petitions bearing signatures of more than 3,300 Rutgers students and those of 700 others at the Universtiys sister school, Douglass Colelge, to New Jer- i
sey’s senators.
^ Y The school w'as injected into the campaign when a Prof. Eugene D. Genovese said he wmuld welcome a Communist
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Sheinwold ™ Bridge
UNITED NATIONS,
UPI— India and Pakistan expressed willingness today to
comply with a Security Council . . ...... demand for ''unconditional” i" 5to T._ ln .y:! t . Repub ! 1 -
withdraw'! of their armed forces
County Hospital Dismissed Friday: Geraldine Lawson, Roaehdale. Stella Brown, Gosport. Stephen Hurst, Greencastle. Geraldine Allee, Greencastle. Births: Mr. and Brs. Steven Lasley. Cloverdale. a girl, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. James Lawson, Martinsville, a boy, Friday. Cahncfar nf tvtnts Tuesday DePauw Wowan’s Club—1:00 'to 4:30 p.m.—Mrs. John Burkhardt’s home in Indianapolis. Wednesday Federated Reading Club— 1:30 p.m.—Mrs. Elmer Seller. Saturday Chapter I, P.E.O. — 7:30 p. m. — Mrs. R. E. Crouch.
Card of Thanks
I w r ish to express my sincere thanks to Dr. Tipton, the nurses and nurse aides and all the staff of the Putnam County Hospital who were so kind during my recent illness. Also Brother Browser, Charles Whitaker and all our friends and neighbors for the cards and flowers. Harold Cox.
AMERICAN LEGION Dance November 6 Town Criers Combo
in Kashmir. But they remained frozen in their positions on a political settlement of the dispute. After the Security Council passed its fifth resolution on the Kashmir conflict Friday, Indiana Foreign Minister Sardar Swaran Singh and Pakistani Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutton again held fast to diffreences that have prevented ' pecaace in the subcontinent for the past 18 years.
cans demanded the professor be ousted, but Gov. Richard J. Hughes, rejected their demands.
Voting Rights Ruling Soon
Perfect Technique Is Nat Always Good By Alfred Sheinwold Would you rather play cards or people? If you had the choice, would you work out a line of play that works against any defense— or wmuld you play for an opponent to make a mistake ? South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH
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WASHINGTON UPI — The U. S. Supreme Court, in a move
to forestall drawn-out court West leads the king and ace of battles and possibly allow clubs in today’s hand, taken | thousands of southern Negroes from th e new "complete Book of to vote in 1966 primary elec- j Duplicate Bridge,” by Norman tions, will give an early ruling Kay, Fred Karpin and the late on the constitutionality of the Sidney Silodor. Then West conVoting Rights Act of 1965. : tinues with the jack of clubs. The court announced Friday If y°u are a technician, you
wrong opponent. You must fall back on the spade finesse, and you are down one when this
: fails.
The technician is a long in this hand because the odds are about 4 to 1 against finding the trumps breaking 2-2 and more diamonds in the West hand than in the East hand. The practical player is a favorite to make the contract. When West leads the jack of clubs at the third trick, our hero discards the deuce of spades instead of ruffing. It isn’t completely logical, but West will usually shift to a spade on the theory that this is the weak spot of the hand. DAILY QUESTION Your partner, not vulnerable, opens this bidding with three diamonds. The next player, vulnerable, passes. You hold: S-J 10 5 H-6 2 D-10 9 2 C-8 7 4 3. What doy ou say? ANSWER: Bid four or five diamonds. Your partner’s bid says he has little if any strength outside of diamonds, and you have no defensive strength at all. The opponents must have a slam, and you should do what you can to talk them out of it.
Mayor To Need Crystal Ball PERU UPI — Under the terms of an emergency snow ordinance introduced at a Peru City Council meeting this week,
Dondridge Will LOS ANGELES UPI — Actress Dorothy Dandridge had only $2 in her bank account when she died Sept. 8. according to her manager, Earl Mills.
night it would assume “original jurisdiction” in the case and hear oral arguments next Jan. 17 in a request by South Carolina that it settle once and for all the validity of the law’s guarantees of voting rights. Justices Hugo L. Black, John M. Harlan and Potter Stewart voted against the order.
At a superior court probate hearing Friday, Mills said Miss Dandrige’s only other assets were furniture and expected royalties from her autobiogra-
phy.
Quaker Vigil
WASHINGTON UPI—Friends of the Quaker who turned himself into a human torch in front of the pentagon building last
Donatelli ruled that the estate Tuesday to protest U. S. policy be divided between Mrs. Dan- in Viet Nam plan to hold a dridge, 60, and Miss Dandrige’s three-hour memorial vigil todaughter, Harolyn Nicholas, 20.' day at the spot where he died.
ruff the jack of clubs, cash the high diamonds and ruff a diamond with the ten of trumps. Cash the king of trumps and lead a trump to dummy’s nine. Now you lead dummy’s last diamond and discard the deuce of spades. You would be home if West had to win this trick because West would have to return a spade to give you a free finesse, or a club, which would allow you to ruff in dummy while you discarded the queen of spades from your hand.
DOES NOT WORK
Unfortunately this flawless technique gets you nowhere because although the trumps break favorably the last diamond trick Is won by the
Infant Girl Is Worth Millions BALTIMORE, Md. UPI — i Irene Sabina Reynolds is 11 months old and worth millions of dollars. Supreme Cout Judge J. Gilbzert Prendergras ruled Thursday that Irene, the daughter of | the late Richard J. Reynolds Jr., should share in an $11 mil- ; lion trust set up 23 years ago ; for his children. Reynolds was | the heir to the tobacco fortune. He died in Switzerland on Dec. 14, two days before Irene wa*
born.
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