The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 January 1966 — Page 2
t Th» Dally Bannar, Oraaneastla, Indiana Friday, January 28, 1966
---Paul Dean (Continued from Pace 1) we’re winning the war now.” If we don’t get the estimated five or six hundred thousand men in Viet Nam, the war couid drag on for five or six years,” the seasoned reporter answered one student’s question. When asked if the American public gets the right view and the correct information about the Viet Nam situation, Dean commented, “No, the public doesn’t get anything except the good side of the story . . . usually it’s the good side for the U.S.” Dean remarked that the professional attitude of the American soldier is making a real difference in the war. The Viet Cong are well-disciplined soldiers that know how to fight in the jungles and the U.S. must have good soldiers to combat them. He also said the attitude of the soldier in Viet is good. “He’s over there to protect his country and he will tell you so.’” Although it may not seem like it, Dean said the United States officials and President Johnson do know what is going on in Viet Nam.
IRS News INDIANAPOLIS — If several persons contribute more than half to the support of an individual during the tax year, one of them may be able to claim the S600 exemption on his income tax return; said James E. Daly, District Director of Internal Revenue Service for Indiana. To qualify, each of the contributors must have been eligible to claim the dependent except for not having, individually, provided more than half of the support. They may agree to let any one of them who contributed more than 10% toward the dependent’s support claim the |600 exemption. Each member of the group who contributed over 10% of the support, except the person claiming the exemption, must furnish a written statement that he will not claim the individual as a dependent on his own tax return. Internal Revenue Form 2120 may be used for this purpose. These statements must tie attached to the return of the person listing the exemption. Document No. 5013, which furnishes more detailed infer-
DR. F. M. BURNS CHIROPRACTOR Mon. thru Fri. 9-12 1-5 Mon. r Tues., Thurs. Evenings 7-9 CLOSED SATURDAYS Phan* OL 3-5S14 South Jackson £ Sunsat Oriv#
QUALITY YOU CAN TRUST SERVICE YOU’LL ENJOY PRIPFt YOU CAN AFFORD You Get All This and More with GLASSES For Tho Family At SPENCER OPTICAL CO. 781 E. Morgan St. Spencer, Ind. Open 9-5 Daily — Inc. Sat. Friday 8 P.M. (Closed Wednesday Afternoon) Phone 829-3981 “See Us To See, and Save”
mation on this subject, and Form 2120 may be obtained by writing to the District Director, Internal Revenue Service.
Studies Reaewal Of /Ur Blows WASHINGTON UPI—President Johnson, perhaps a step away from ordering renewed bombing of North Viet Nam, is giving prime attention to the questions of when to act and how. far to go. According to high authority, Johnson is convinced the 36-day old pause in air strikes has failed in its aim of bringing the Communists to the conference table. The- President was described as holding back until the last possible moment before making a final decision for resumption of the raids above the 17th Parallel boundary between North and South Viet Nam. As late as Thursday afternoon, Johnson was reported as undecided as to when or to what extent to resume the bombings. He was understood also to have made no decision whether to state his position to Congress and the public or to simply let events take their course if and when the bombings start. It was stated on excellent authority that Johnson has received no sign from any world capital that North Viet Nam, the Viet Cong guerrillas, or Red China wants to talk about ending the war. It is Johnson’s belief he has the backing of a vast majority of Congress on the basic question of American determination to stand fast against aggression in Viet Nam until it ends. But Johnson was said to be concerned with “hawks” in Congress who have called for all-out attacks, including raids on the capital of Hanoi and the nearby port of Haiphong for the first time.
Highway Facelift WASHINGTON UPI — Commerce Secretary John T. Connor has made public draft standards for regulation of auto junkyards and highway advertising under last year’s Highway Beautification Act. Connor said Thursday public hearings would be held before final minimum standards are set. The act provides for control of billboards within 660 feet and junkyards within 1,000 feet of interstate or federally aided primary highways.
Heart Man NEW YORK UPI — The American Heart Association has named Rep. John E. Fogarty, D-R.L, recipient of its 1966 Heart of the Year Award. Fogarty, sponsor of legislation to create and sustain the National Institutes of Health, was cited Thursday for “faith, courage and achievement in meeting the personal challenge of heart disease.”
Sticky Wicket LANCASTER, Eng. UPI — A message from Princess Alexandria is being left out of a students magazine at Lancaster University because it would have preceded an article entitled “How to Succeed in Seduction.”
Traffic Toll 111 An Indianapolis man’s death today from injuries suffered in an accident last weekend raised Indiana’s 1966 traffic fatality toll to at least 111 compared with 83 a year ago. Walter J. Colby died in St. Vincent’s Hospital. He was hurt Jan. 22 in a two-car collision at Indiana 37 and 46th St. in Indianapolis.
RECTOR FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE PHONE Ol 3-4E10
OUR SPECIALTY WEDDING and BIRTHDAY CAKES PAULS PASTRY SHOP XUS V JACKSOA ST PHOftS Ol S-JUUM
TNI DAILY IANNB AND HERALD CONSOLIDATED "It Wovm Par AH" 24-28 S. Jackson St. Groancastio, lad. tusin*ss Phono Ol 3-5151 Elisabeth Raridan Estate, Publishar S. R. Raridan, Senior Editor Nonaa HiH, Goa. Mgr. Jamas 8. Zeis, Monotint Editor Wiliam D. Hooter, Adv. Mgr. Entered in the Post Office at Groan, castle, Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March 7, 1878. SabscripliMi Priest Ham* Oofieory 40c par weak Moiod h» Putaom Co. $ •.HO par year Outside of Putnam Co. $1990 par year Outside of Indiana $14.00 par year Bible Thought These are the things ye shall do; Speak every man the truth to his neighbour, execute the judgment of truth and peace in your gates. Zachariah 8:16. God’s “good neighbor policy” for all times and all people. Largely, unfortunately untried! Personal And Local News Monday, Jan: 31st will be the last day to file claims with the County Auditor. Harriett Agnew entered Putnam County Hospital Monday. Her room number is 221. Mrs. Gladys Prichard returned home Wednesday by ambulance from the Methodist Hospital. Mrs. Gwen Beck of Bainbridge spent an afternoon recently with her friend, Mrs. Myrtle Boatman. DePauw University Saturday Art Classes for children will start January 29 in the art center. There are still openings in the junior and senior high school groups. The Founders’ Day Meeting of the Woman’s Club will be held at the Memorial Student Union, Room 221, at 2 o’lock, February 2. Dr. James Elrod will present the program, "Humor in the Theater.” The Maple Heights Home Demonstration Club will meet Tuesday evening, Feb. 1st. at at 7:30 o’clock at the club house. Members are asked to bring a hankie for the Valentine exchange, also a gift for the dutch grab-bag. An Evansville College coed from Fillmore is one of 204 students to be named to the Dean’s List for the Fall Quarter. She is Miss Carol D. Sutherlin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Sutherlin, R. R. I, Fillmore. Carol, a sophomore majoring in music education, has received the honor for four consecutive quarters.
Putnam Court Notes The First National Bank of DanviUe vs Dale R. Miller, Blanche J. Miller, complaint on account. Jerry Lee Petak by his next friend Joe Petak vs Terry A. Ave, 920 North 8th Street, Clinton, Complaint for damages.
County Hospital Dismissed Thursday: Carol Bush, Spencer Sylvia Clark, Mooresville Josefina Anzulovich, Roachdale Opal Phelps, Greencastle Karen Conyers, Greencastle Morris Coffman, Greencastle
CARD OF THANKS I would sincerely like to thank doctors Schauwecker, Lett, and Ellett, the nurses, the entire staff of Putnam County Hospital for the wonderful treatment, all the courtesies shown during my stay at the hospital. Also want to thank all the ministers, relatives and friends who took time for a visit and sent flowers and cards. May God richly Bless each one. Rush E. Ottinger Samuel Robert Houser
An Invitofion We would like to welcome our neighbors and friends to the New Providence Baptist Church on Sunday evening Jan. 30 at 7 p. m. Brother Jack Lucas, a young minister from the Brazil Baptist Church will be preaching and his brother will have special music. The Sr. B.Y.F. will have complete charge of this service and we urge all young people to attend this service. Other services throughout the day include Sunday School at 10 a. m.; morning worship at 11 a. m., Jr. and Sr. BYF at 6 p. m.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Gould, Sr. of Greencastle, wish to announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Elizabeth Susan to Richard Allen Woods. The future bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Woods of Fillmore. Their March 27 wedding will take place at 2:30 p.m. at the First Christian Church in Greencastle.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Sutherlin of Fillmore wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Diane, to Howard Blades, son of Mrs. Eleanor Blades, of Harrisburg. 111. Both are students at Evansville College, enrolled in music education. No wedding date has been set.
—Severe Winter (Continued from Page 1) The big Atlantic coast storm blanketed Old Town, Maine, with six inches of fresh snow during the night, to bring the total on the ground to 20 inches. Portland, Maine, and Concord, N.H., picked up two more inches of snow. The U.S. Weather Bureau warned of a “potentially dangerous” new storm brewing in the southern Rockies early today. It said the storm center would bring snow over the frozen Plains later in the day.
Cub Pack News The regular monthly cub scout pack No. 96 meeting was held in the Fillmore Christian Church Wednesday evening. The Parent attendance award was won by den 1 with Mrs. Chestnut and Mrs. Devasher den mothers. Den exhibits on the theme transportation were given: Den 1 — the progress of transportation and Den 2 — Water transportation. Awards were presented by cubmaster Rev. George Pyke to Jerry Chestnut — Bobcat; Danny Scobee — Wolf; and Bear — Terry Cunningham. Treasurer Herschel Scobee announced the pack charter was sent into the Wabash office .A letter of thank you from Putnam County Hospital for the tray favorites was read. A free trip around the world (a walk around a globe) was won by Johnny Jones and his mother. Two movies on transportation were shown to conclude the program. The next pack meeting will be the annual Blue and Gold Banquet in February.
Dr. Haroutunian Delivers Third Mendenhall Lecture
To the Editor
Earlier this month the Indianapolis newspapers carried an article Informing their readers of a conference to be held on February 5, the inferred pretext of which is to stimulate interest in government among Indiana high school students. The conference is under the direction of one elected Democrat official. Senator Birch Bayh, who will be assisted by four Democrat Presidential appointees: U. S. Ambassador to Luxembourg Mrs. Patricia Roberts Harris, Assistant Secretary of State G. Mennen “Soapy” Williams, Assistant Secretary of Defense John T. McNaughton and Executive Director of the President’s Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Chime James W. Symington. The cost of the program is being paid for by taxpayers money, taxpayers who are BOTH Republican as well as Democrat. It is almost beyond my understanding why some astute politician, or at least some fair minded irate citizen, didn’t blow the lid off of this sham the instant the announcement was made. This is without question the most sordid hoax perpetrated by one of our highest elected state officials in more years than most Hoosiers can re
member.
If this is the democracy I fought three years for during World War n, perhaps I would have been better off to have spent my time in another «n
deavor.
Are we, as citizens, supposed to stand idly by while the party overwhelmingly in- power cram their doctrines down the throats of our youth? I say, not on your life. This method is too suggestive of the tactics used by certain European countries in the years prior to 1939. It is a clear and concise politically partisan maneuver. In view of the fact that this conference is being supported by both Republican and Democrat tax money, would it not be more apposite to make the panel bipartisan? Since this meeting, being supported by taxpayers money, is to be strictly a partisan forum of the Democrats and since two students and one teacher have been invited from every high school in Indiana, it should be most interesting to the townpeople where these high schools are located, when they learn which teacher or principal may be finding it advantageous to play footsie with the powers
that be.
Hugh E. Berndt 2913 S. Walcott St. Indianapolis, Indiana
Restiveness in academic life today is a by • product of much deeper problem — a type of false commitment to truth — University of Chicago theologian Dr. Joseph Haroutunian said Wednesday evening at De-
Pauw University.
’The academic man has a singular commitment to the qqest for truth,” Haroutunian said, “and all praise and honor
is due him for this.”
The knowledge uncovered by the strictly disciplined, academic mind “opens our eyes to let us see the truth” and has made many significant contributions
to man’s progress.
However, “there is a temptation to turn the love of truth into a drive for power” and this
fact has played an instrumental role in the restless attitude present in academic today. The drive for power enters when man forgets that the real question in an individual’s search for truth is what it means to be a human being, Haroutunian suggested. “Man is a being who exists at all times presented with decisions as to what it means to be a man. He exists as a being who is under trial to be what he is.” Knowledge often presents a peculiar kind of temptation by inducing man to forget the fact that the essence of his existence is being and living with other men in a sense of spiritual conviction.
| “The commitment to truth ' degenerates into a commitment to power when commitment to fidelity to other men is absent.” The academic mind must recognize its role is always cast “in the light of the inseparability of human trial, temptation and tribulation.” When man fails to see his life in this context, Haroutunian said, “he misunderstands himself and his very quest for truth can bring misery to the earth.” Haroutunian, a professor of systematic theology at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago made his remarks in the third of his four addresses given in DePauw’s Mendenhall Lecturer series.
Club Meets With Barbara Boschen The Tip Toppers Home Demonstration Club met at the home of Barbara Boschen for the January meeting. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mrs. Jack Anderson. A very informative and well presented lesson on cheese cookery was given by Mrs. Barbara Boschen. She prepared caraway sandwich loaf with cheese spread, and the lime jello with cream cheese and served as refreshments. The history of cheese making and the types and kinds of cheese was also given. Mrs. Jack Anderson reported on the council meeting. Secretary’s and Treasurer’s reports were given and approved as read. r Eight members answered roll call The next meeting will be held Feb. 15 with Mrs. Ralph Cox.
States stood ready to begin “at once.” But Soviet delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin made it clear the Kremlin was ready to begin immediate negotiations for a treaty only on its own terms. Both the United States and Russia have submitted proposals to ban the spread of nuclear weapons. William C. Foster, the chief American negotiator, said the United States was prepared to begin negotiations on the basis of either plan, or an any other substantive proposal.
Ice Not Ready ~ PUEBLO, Colo. UPI — Pueblo Parks Director George Williams wasn’t kidding when he warned residents they would be skating on thin ice on the city park lake. He said a tractor clearing snow from the lake dropped through the ice. Its driver was wet but uninjured. “We’ll need at least two mors cold nights,” Williams said.
Mrs. Max West Is Club Hostess The Marionette Home Demonstration Club met January 25 at the home of Mrs. Max West, Fillmore. Twelve members answered the roll call with “If I were snowed in, I would . . We had one guest. Mrs. Donald Kendall gave the j lesson “Cheese Cookery.” We learned that there are 28 different kinds of cheese, 18 of which can be bought in Greencastle. She gave us various recipes for cooking with cheese. Mrs. Kenneth Phillips was in charge of the business meeting. Next month each member is to bring three wrapped articles for the white elephant sale. Mrs. Cedric Tharp won the door prize, a heart-shaped cake, baked by the hostess. Mrs. Roscoe Irvin won another prize. Delicious refreshments prepared by the lesson leader and hostess to demonstrate the lesson were enjoyed by all.
Family Meat Budget Theme of Meeting “How To Make the Most of the Family Meat Budget” will be the theme of the second in the regular series of County Home Demonstration Club Leader Training meetings. In light of the present high cost of meat, this will give an opportunity to learn how to buy and prepare the cuts of meat available. Any interested person is welcome to attend these meetings. Come to the Community Building at the Fair Grounds Monday, January 31, at 1-3 p.m. or 7-ty p.m.
S.C. Filibuster la Ninth Day COLUMBIA, S. C. UPI — A filibuster against reapportionment droned on for the ninth day today in the South Carolina Senate where the glare of network television and a plain talking tobacco farmer shattered the image of one of the country’s oldest legislative bodies. Their ties straight, backs stiff and purpose firm, the tradition - steeped senate, which claims to be older than the nation itself, strove mightily for decorum Thursday when television cameras from two networks trained on the forum. It was Sen. Roger W. Scott’s turn to speak against a reapportionment plan for the state senate, which would favor a more urban realignment and lose seats for rural senators. Scott is a 67-year-old tobacco farmer from rural Dillon County. ’Td rather be up here than back home telling lies at the filling station,” Scott said. “Ignorance is in high places and it always will be.” He talked on in high spirits. “Reapportionment started when Moses took the Israelites to the Promised Land from Egypt.” His cohorts in the marathon talk and his opponents sitting it out joined forces to get him off the floor and away from the cameras. All else had failed and the senate took its one last step to stop the televised Scott. Permission for pictures was revoked. The filibuster, longest in the state’s history, centered over a 50-member senate reapportion plan. It was approved by the urban-led house.
Diplomats Work Behind Scenes GENEVA UPI — Diplomats today worked behind the scenes of the Geneva disarmament conference to launch preliminary negotiations on proposals to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. President Johnson, in a message to the 17-nation conference which resumed Thursday after a four month recess, urged the meeting to reach agreement on non-proliferation “while there is yet time.” Members agreed in principle to give the problem priority because of the danger of a worldwide nuclear race, and American officials said the United
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE
'65 MONZA 4 DOOR SEDAN Automatic trantmission and all accostorie*. Only 9500 miles an 99 car, be sure that you see this car before you buy. $2095 '64 CORVAIR COUPE Standard Transmission, Radio and Heater. $1195 '61 CHEVROLET SEDAN 2 doer with 409 enema, 0 speed transmission. $650 '62 CHEVROLET IMPALA 9 passenger station wagon, 0 cyl. Fewer steering and power brakes. This is a good wagon. $1350 '63 CHEVROLET IMPALA 0 cyl. air conditioned, automatic transmission, powor stsoring and powor brakes. $1695 '61 PLYMOUTH Fury convortiblo. A nice clean convertible. $995 '62 BUICK INVICTA Convertible, power steering, power brakes. $1595 '63 DODGE STATION WAGON 4 deer with luggage rack, 4 cyl. standard transmission, radio and heater. $1095 '63 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR. SEDAN A real clean car to own. $1195 '65 CHEVY BELAIR Demonstrator, 4 deer sedan, V-0 Automatic Transmission, power steering. $2895 '65 BUICK WILDCAT 2 Dr. Hard lop with all accessories. $3395 '63 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2 deer Clean 4 cyL car. $1195 '62 RENAULT CARAVELLE Convertible, also with a hard top $895
FREE CUSTOMER TRANSPORTATION Hours: Monday thru Friday 8 to 8, Sat. 8 to 5
jiM HARR95 CHEVROLET-BUICK
INDIANAPOLIS ROAD
