The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 December 1965 — Page 1

INDIANA STATE LIERAHT INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Weather Forecast | _ |OI ^3 ^ ^ 4c3L I I 1 S C^L ^3 "It Waves For All" Mild "Wo can not but spook tito ttunye which wo havo soon or hoard." Acts 4:20

VOLUME SEVENTY-FOUR

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1965

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE NO. 32

USS ENTERPRISE JOINS VIET NAM WAR Dillon IlmfK Primitv On . Carrier's Planes

I I l^r I I I U ■ I I I ll V I ■ cess Margaret, as chancellor of ter R. Hibbard Jr., 47, former

"* * the new University of Keele, be- director of ^tallurgy and ce-

^ . . ramie research for General ■ ■ # ^ ■■■ ^

Highway Condemnations =3= H,t Con 9 Targets

abeth. It was the first daughter-to-mother investiture in British

royal history.

INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Atty. Gen. John J. Dillon Wednesday called or. judges to handle highpreference litigations in order to get Indiana’s interstate road program completed on schedule in 1972. Dillon was one of 12 speakers at a day-long highway trial counsel conference attended by about 150 lawyers, engineers, appraisers and highway person-

nel.

‘‘The success of the interstate highway hinges upon our ability to get the necessary right-of-way within the re-

quired time,”

analysis and that of the state

Hibbard, whose appointment to the post will be subject to Senate confirmation at the next

Gemini 7 Astronauts Poised For Space Trip

The queen mother, who had S€SS i° n Congress, replaces

to bow deeply to her daughter, said beforehand: ‘T must try not to giggle.” Wins Vote

Marling J. Ankeny, who retired

11 months ago.

Fire Lighters

MEMPHIS, Tenn. UPI — Two volunteer firemen must serve jail sentences for deliber-

Badges Awarded Cub Pack 99

CAPE KENNEDY UPI

MOGADISCIA, Somalia UPI — The government of Premier

.. ately setting two homes afire

Adbinzak Hagx won a confi- , / , 6 ,

1 ^gy t(>

Trumpet Soloist Will Give Chapel Program

The regular meeting of Pack approval for launch Saturday.

99 was held Monday, November

Dillon said. “Our 22i at ^ Christian Church. With 016 man y hours of P rac *

A movie was shown on Gun tice sessions behind them, the

highway department indicates safety which showed interest- 6 P ace P ilots P ianned to s P end a11 that the peak load of condem- anc j use f u i yp s ^ an. of today and part of Friday nation cases will come during A skit of the 12 achievements studying their 329-hour flight the years 1966 and 1967.” on how to becom€ a Wo if Scout Plan and attending the final “It is extremely important was performed by Mrs. status meetings,

that you people go back to Wagoner’s Den 6.

your respectitve county judges Badges were awarded as fol-

and explain to them the ur- ] ows:

gency of this situation,” Dillon Wolf> Hamm

dence vote in the National As-

Gemini 7 astronauts Frank pembly early Wednesday, 86 to Borman and James Lovell, “fit 35 w ^ th 5 abstentions,

and ready” for 14 days in space,

went into a day of meetings to- number of independent dep-

day with a unanimous stamp of uties joined the ruling Young Willie L. Berryhill, 22, to serve

Somali League in voting for the three years each at the county government of this East Afri- penal farm. They pleaded guilty can state. to two counts of arson.

just because light fires.”

Criminal Cout Judge Ben Hooks Wednesday ordered Jimmy Franklin Owens, 23, and

Bear, Mark Jeffries,

Koenig

Gold & Silver, Kevin Gough 2 Silver, Robbie Knauer Silver, Mark Headley Denner Bars, Mark Hamm,

John Hoskins,

said. “These cases are in my judgment preference litigation.” Dillon said he felt that "once the judges understand that the success of the highway program hinges upon acquisition

of right-ofway and the dis- Robin Wood position of these cases, they Kevin Gough,

will set enough time aside on Refreshments were served to their court calendars to dispose 70 adults and children by Mrs. areas -

of these urgent matters.” Eiteljorge’s Den 5.

Dillon said there is a backlog The meetiing adjourned by of about 800 cases and 3,000 £h € group saying “Pledge of

more probably will be added in Allegiance.”

the next two years. The next meeting will be De- Hang

Under Indiana law, when a cember 13, 7:00 p. m.

As the countdown approached "T-minus 48 hours,” preparations for the year-ending flight of Gemini 7 and then the Gem-

Close Race Develops Over Gen. DeGaulle

Tom ^ g rendezvous ship nine days later were proceeding without

a hitch.

Even the weathermen gave their tentative approval for launch Saturday. Good weather was expected at both the launch site and the ocean landing

30 Degrees In Cross City, Fla. By United P><»» International

PARIS UPI—For the first time, Frenchmen are talking seriously about the possibility that President Charles de Gaulle may not win his bid for re-election Sunday. That could mean the end of the “De Gaulle Era,” with all

The sunny Southland shivered the implications such a developthrough its second morning of ment would contain for France near and below freezing tern- and the rest of the world at Borman and Lovell got their peratures today. large,

medical clearance Wednesday Crosg recorded 30 aoes not mean that the from Dr. Charles E. Berry and eg TVsmpera- 75-year-old French leader is his team of astronaut physi- tures ^ ^ mid ^ were re _ i ike i y to be beaten by one of

corded at Gainesville, Talla- hLs five opponents in the presi-

highway condemnation case

reaches a certain point, it is ScilOll Will

Gemini 6 pilots Walter Schirra hassee and Jacksonville, Fla,

and Thomas Stafford, set to be rocketed in pursuit of Gerini 7 at 9:10 a.m. EST Dec. 13, were given preliminary medical

checks and also passed without chided

possible to pay the money in

escrow and gain right of entry 00 | |J P(||)clist

while the litigation is in prog-

ress. However, if the backlog Miss Judith Ann Scholl, a becomes too great, the land senior at Indiana University difficulty.

acquisition program delays the who is participating in the “Both crews were pronounced construction program. School of Education Honors fit and ready," the Federal

Program, has been invited by Space Agency said.

Associate Dean R. Chapman of Today, spacecraft technicians the School of Arts and Sciences were hooking up various exploat Indiana University to be a sive devices in the Gemini 7 panelist for Saturday morning’s spacecraft and completing the program at the annual Honors loading of super-cold liquid hy-

Two runs were made by the conference which faculty mem- drogen to the fuel cell electrical city firemen Wednesday. bers of all colleges in Indiana power supply system.

At 11:45 a.m., the firemen ^nll attend, will be held this

were called to Longden Hall, year on the LU . campus, De- MfS. Bradley Dies

905 South College Avenue. They cember 3 and 4.

reported a trash fire.

Earlier, at 9:13 a.m., a run was made to the Paul Secrest

dential race, but people are beginning to wonder whether he

Northern Florida was hardest can win a majority on the first

hit by the cold but other sec- try.

tions of the South also were From a generally estimated

Two Runs Made By City Firemen

WASHINGTON UPI — Mrs.

The panel will be made up of Mary Quayle Bradley, wife of

support of about 66 per cent of

Relatively mild December the nation, the polls say he has weather prevailed over the rest fallen to less than 50 per cent of the nation with the upper within the last month. Midwest enjoying a slight Under the French voting syswarming. tern, in order to be elected on Rain pelted the Northern the first go-around Sunday, De Pacific Coast Wednesday night Gaulle or one of his five opponand showers were also felt in ents must get more than half the South Central states. the total votes cast. If not,

there will be a runoff ballot Dec. 19 between the two highest

contenders.

It is generally asumed that in such a runoff De Gaulle

The Antarctic ice cap may would be an easy winner. But have been in existence for as the big question is whether he

Now You Know

By United Preit International

six members, two are beginning <3^ Omar N. Bradley, died long as eleven million years, would subject himself to one.

residenci* 136 West Berrv ^ eac ^ ers ’ ^ w0 ^ ave 3 US * finish- yesterday at Walter Reed Army according to geologists at the Many of his closest aides he-

ed their student teaching, and Hospital of leukemia. University of Minnesota. lieve he would not. two will student teach second ——_____ —— —

Street.

They reported a faulty furnace blower control but no fire.

semester. They will discuss “How the School of Education Can Better Prepare Students

for Teaching.”

Miss Scholl is the daughter of

Breaks Barrier

KABUL, AFGHANISTAN

UPI — Miss Kobra Noorzai was Mr. and Mrs. Harold Scholl, 803 named minister of public health Gardenside Drive, Greencastle. Wednesday to become the first She will do her student teachwoman cabinet member in Af- ing next semester in New Alghan history. bany, Indiana in the elementary Red China Says U. S. Planes Shot Fishermen

TOKYO UPI — Communist China has accused the United States of attacking Chinese fishing boats and killing some fishermen. In a note addressed to President Johnson it warned of stem retribution. The charges, broadcast by the Communist New China News Agency NCNA, said U.S. jet planes bombed and strafed Peking’s boats on the high seas several times. The broadcast quoted an unnamed Peking of20 Years Ago City firemen were called to Locust Manor, on South Locust Street, when a chimney burned out. Mrs[ Fred Casper was confined to her home by illness. Mrs. Ned Wood, Mrs. Earle Wiseman and Mrs. John Cartwright attended a state Tri Kappa meeting at the Lincoln Hotel in Indianapolis.

ficial as saying, “This account will certainly be settled.” The broadcast said Peking had sent the “strongest protest” to Johnson. The news agency quoting the “departments concerned,” said the latest attack came Nov. 25, when two U.S. jets allegedly circled a fishery commune boat in the Bac Bo Gulf and then fired “two volleys” of shells killing a fisherman, Chan Jih-Chuang. NCNA said another fisherman was wounded and that boat was damaged in several places. On Nov. 18. the monitored dispatch said, a single U.S. jet dived and strafed one of three boats fishing on the high seas, also in the Bac Bo Gulf. The report said the attacks, which left "the marks of 14 shells" on the boat, killed fisherman Mai Chung-Hsing and wounded six others.

DELTA GAMMA TO HOLD BAZAAR Delta Gamma Sorority will hold its annual Hannah’s Holly House Bazaar next Saturday in the St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. Proceeds and benefits from the bazaar will go to the Sight Conservation and Aid to the Blind. Representatives of the house are shown above with some articles that are to be sold. Banner Photo—Frank Puckett, Jr. J

Rites Saturday For Mrs. Brothers Mrs. Orpha T. Brothers, 91, a life-long resident of Putnam County, passed away at the Greencastle Christian Home on Thursday morning, December 2. Mrs. Brothers, daughter of John A. Turner and Sarah Goslin Turner, was bom Dec. 18, 1873. After her marriage in 1900 to J. C. Brothers, she resided in Greencastle. Since that time she had been an active member of the First Christian Church, and until recently had participated in club and community afafirs. She is survived by a daughter, Cena B. Morgan of Greencastle; a grandson, David C. Morgan of Owego, N. Y.; two great-grandchildren; one brother, Fred H. Turner, Fredericksburg, Va.; and other relatives. Funeral services will be held at the Rector Funeral Home on Saturday, Dec. 4, at two o’clock. Interment will be in Forest Hill Abbey. Friends may call any time after noon on Friday. Walter Dorsett Barn Destroyed An estimated 325,000 damage resulted Tuesday when a bam on the farm of Walter Dorsett, one mile south of Belle Union, was destroyed by fire. Four fire departments were called to the scene, but the fire remained out of control until the bam was destroyed. Belle Union, Cloverdale, Eminence, and Monrovia fire departments reached the scene minutes after being called. Estimated lost in the fire were 4 sows, three with litters, a truck, hay and farm implements, and a prize registered Angus bull and caused a total loss of around $25,000.00. The fire was reported to have started sometime around 10 a. m. Tuesday. Woman, Son Traffic Victims By United Presi International A woman and her 7-year-old son were killed in an accident near Mitchell late Wednesday, raising Indiana’s 1965 traffic fatality toll to at least 1,353 compared with 1,267 a year ago. Mrs. Mary K. William, 24, Orleans, was dead on arrival at Dunn Memorial Hospital in Bedford. Her son Richard also was killed, and two other sons, Roger Dean, 6, and David, 4. were injured, the latter seri-

ously.

The accident happened, state police said, when a truck driven by Nathan J. Wright, 26, R.R. 2, Millerton, Pa., veered into the wrong lane of Indiana 37 two miles south of Mitchell and struck the Williams car almost head-on. Wright was detained in a preliminary charge of driving to the left of center of a highway. Youngster Dies Richard Hazlett, age 6, died early Thursday morning at the Riley Hospital in Indianapolis. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Hazlett, Greencastle, Route 3. Funeral arrangements are in rJiarge of Rector Funeral Home.

An unusual chapel program will be presented in Meharry Hall on Friday, December 3, at 10.00 a.m., by Robert Grocock, trumpet soloist, and member of the faculty of the School of Music, DePauw University. Employing four different trumpets, including the extremely difficult piccolo trumpet, and a variety of mutes, Mr. Grocock, assisted by Henry Rolling, pianist, will perform selections ranging from the early 18th century to contemporary writings. He will say a few words about each instrument and selection being performed. The program will close with a work for trumpet, clarinet, cello and piano In which Mr. Grocock will be joined by Floyd Peterson, clarinet, Cassel Grubb, cello, and Carol Wessler, piano, members of the School of Music

faculty.

Mr. Grocock, a former member of the Rochester and Chicago Symphony orchestra, has performed under many of the most famous conductors of our time Including such men as Leonard Bernstein, Bruno Walter and Rafael Kubelik. Widelyknown as a trumpet virtuoso, he is one of the few performers in the country versatile enough to perform this kind of program. Mr. Grocock, a pastpresident of the National Association of College Wind and Percussion Instructors, Is active as a clinicial and adjudicator and is a member of the summer school faculty of the world-famous National Music Camp in Interlochen, Michigan. There will be no admission charge and the public is cordially invited to attend.

Weather Word WASHINGTON UPI — The U. S. Weather Bureau is predicting colder than normal temperatures for the Northeast during December, but above average readings for the West

and the South.

In its extended 30-day outlook for December, the bureau said Wednesday that precipitation was expected to exceed normal in a “broad belt extending from southern portions of the W'estem Plateau through the southern half of the nation” and in the Far Northwest. As for the drought-stricken Northeast, the bureau said rainfall during December probably would be about normal.

SAIGON UPI — The nuclearpowered aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, mightiest vessel afloat, went to war for the first time today and launched a record 140 attack sorties against Communist targets in South Viet Nam. Two planes from the “Big E” were lost. One was shot down over South Viet Nam and the second crashed near the ship as it plowed through huge waves 100 miles off the Vietnamese coast in the South China Sea. Despite its size, the carrier pitched and bucked, making it extremely difficult for returning planes to land. The giant man-of-war entered the fighting as a U. S. military spokesman reported new American raids on Communist missile sites and bridges within 35 miles of the North Vietnamese capital of Hanoi Wednesday. Two planes were shot down and both pilots were killed. Communist gunners firing conventional antiaircraft weapons brought down both planes over the North, although pilots reported seeing four ineffective surface-to-air missiles. In South Viet Nam, Communist forces boldly attacked the district town of Binh Chanh only 10 miles southwest of Saigon before dawn today and fought a 90-minute mortal duel with Vietnamese defenders. The Viet Cong broke contact shortly after S el m., in the face of heavy machine gun fire from helicopters swooping over the battle under the light of flares dropped from transport

planes.

One of the planes downed over North Viet Nam Wednesday was an Air Force FI 05 Thunderchief fighter - bomber raiding a railway bridge 50 files northeast of Hanoi. No parachute was seen as the jet plunged to earth. The other was a Navy Skyhawk hitting a railroad and highway bridge 35 miles east of the Communist capital. It exploded in the air. Air Force planes flew the strike against the missile sites 35 miles and 40 miles northeast of Hanoi. Pilots unleashed rockets against the sites, but reported that smoke and dust kicked up by the attack prevented them from seeing how much damage was done.

Adultery?

CHICAGO UPI — Eighty-year-old John Amos stands accused of adultry. In a divorce action filed Wednesday, Amos’ wife, Gertrude, said the suburban Wilmette industrialist not only committed adultery, but squandered money on the horses. To back up the latter charge, her lawyer, Norman Becker, showed the court a handful of parimutuel tickets.

NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK

INDIANA WEATHER: Considerable cloudiness today, tonight and Friday. A little warmer today and tonight. Mild Friday. Chance of a little rain late today and tonight and Friday. Windy today. Southwest winds 20 to 30 miles per hour. High today 47 to 52. Low tonight 35 to 40. High Friday 50 to 57. Outlook for Saturday: Mostly cloudy and turning colder with chance of showers. Minimum £'0* 6 A.M 3.V 7 A.M 32’ 8 A.M 33 9 A.M 35° 10 A.M 38* 11 A.M 41® 12 Noon 42® 1 P.M 46*