The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 June 1966 — Page 3

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AGENTS OFFICE

•y Tovth Asm* JERRY WIUIAMR

4-H camping season will soon be here. Putnam County’s Camp is in the process of being planned. We will be camping with Parke and Washington Counties. Our 4-H Camp is held at Shakamak State Park during the days of June 23-26. Letters are being sent out to all 4-H members encouraging them to register for camp. The camp is open to all 4-H members. Registration can be made at the County Extension Office either by mail or by office visitation. The cost will be $7.00 for the camp fee plus ll.OOlTthe”camper wants to ride the bus to and from camp. We would like to have the registration by June 17.

There were seven Junior Leaders that went to Junior Leader Training Camp at Shakamak this past week end. These Junior Leaders went to learn how to operate a camp. Those attending were James Albin, Bainbridge; Tonya Harris, and Robert New, Greencastle; Pam Price, Shirley Allegree, Jerry Sinclair and Larry Williams, Cloverdale. * * • There will be a 4-H TV Show on Channel 4 Saturday, June 11, in which I will be participating. There will be a few pictures used that were taken in Putnam County. * • • Unda Niles of Russellville will be going to the state 4-H Center to be in the State 4-H Band on June 13-15. The State Band will perform at the Purdue 4-R Roundup. The Band is composed of one hundred 4-H members from the entire state. • • * Putnam County will have 30 4-H members going to the Purdue Roundup next week. They will leave next Tuesday and return Thursday. Those attending are as follows: Judy Stevens and Lynn Farrow, Bainbridge; Shirley Allegree,, Cloverdale; Sara Britton and Nancy Perkins, Roachdale; Ruthie Miller and Diana Miller, Greencastle; Stephanie Vaughn, Carolyn Hurst and Sherrie Flatter, Fillmore; Donna South, Becky McFarland and Patty O’Hair, Bainbridge; Karen Spencer and Linda Rector, Russellville; Doris

■ Hartman, Putnamville; Sheila Sutherlin and Wanda Morlan, Reelsville. The boys that will be attending are Denis O’Hair, Phillip Clodfelter and Philip Malicoat, Bainbridge; John New, Greencastle; Larry Wilson, Bainbridge; Teddy Brewer, Greencastle; Danny Cottingim, Fillmore; David Carrington, Russellville. Junior Leaders that will be assisting are Sandy Sibbitt, Bainbridge; Pam Price, Cloverdale; Ralph Fry, Roachdale; and Allen Sutherlin, Fillmore. * * * The Junior Leaders ‘ officers will meet at the County Extension office Thursday night, June 16, at 7:30 p.m. This meeting is to make final arrangements for the next Junior Leader meeting which is June 20. • • * The 4-H Dog Club will meet Thursday night, June 16, 7:30 p.m. at the County Extension office. All members should plan to attend. • • • The 4-H Home Ec judging will be held Friday, 17th. This year the judging will be held in arts and crafts, and food preservation. • • • The Young Adult Club will meet Monday, June 13, 7:30 p.m. at the 4-H Building. Ward Mayhall of Greencastle will be the featured speaker. Any single young adult between the ages of 18 and 28 is welcome to attend.

LETTER

to the EDITOR

Dear Editor: Why is the intersection of East Franklin and N. Locust Sts. a yield instead of a stop intersection? There are six intersections on East Franklin and that one is the only yield. If I remember correctly there have been accidents at that particular intersection. I counted 21 cars passing that intersection in 5 minutes one day and 6 of the 21 traveling Franklin didn’t yield. The Indiana Driver’s manual states the definition of a yield sign as “this is almost a stop sign. It means stop if another car is coming on the intersecting road or street.” What (in the interest of safety) would it take to get the city to replace the yield sign with a stop sign at East Franklin? A Reader G. M

Vacation School At First Baptist

Says Would-Be Staffer Her Loyalty Still Lives

By ROBERTA ROESCH “Employers who keep Insisting that loyalty is dead ought to give women who are over 50 a chance to prove it isn’t,” Writes a Pennsylvania reader, currently seeking a job. “I am writing this in response to one of your columns in which you related the story of a laboratory owner who said that the kind of loyalty he would like to see in the people he hires diminishes more each year. Caused A Breakdown “In the column I have in mind,” she says, “a girl who worked in his laboratory allowed an expensive machine to break down because, if she had taken the time to fix it or report that something was wrong, she would have been a few minutes late leaving the lab for the day. “Might I suggest to this employer, and to others who feel as he does, that some of us who are over 50 might exhibit the kind of loyalty he says he would like to see? “Most of us received our training and working experience in times when loyalty mattered so much we would never have left for the day without fixing the machine or reporting the trouble, even if it meant working overtime without pay to do it “Maybe if you print this letter, it will open the eyes of some of the employers who generally turn down women who are 50 and over in favor of younger employees.” Similar To Others This letter is one of several that had a similar message for employers who bemoan the fact that old-fashioned loyalty from their staff is an item that has gone out like the quill pen. But I also would like to point out that the kind of old-fash-ioned loyalty many mature jobseekers are anxious and willing to give can be an asset when you are looking for employment, if you stress it enough. To make this point work for you, emphasize it in every letter of application you write and in every interview you have been granted. Say that you are mentioning it, because you have heard so often that loyalty is a dying thing among employees today. Then indicate to prospective employers that you were bom and bred on it and would like to prove it won’t be

dead when you become an employee.

A Reader Says She Wants Only A Chance To Show Her Loyalty As you promote this asset as something a boss will want, present additional points in the form of concrete examples of your previous loyalty to your former employers or community commitments. If you can get letters to substantiate your claims, so much the better. Added Attributes Finally, add marketable skills, a good appearance and a realistic approach to working to your brand of old-fashioned loyalty and you will find your prospects brighter for a job no matter how old you are. Women are doing this every day. So you can do it, too.

Arabs To Fight With Viet Cong CAIRO, U.A.R. UPI — Members of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s (PLO) army will be sent to Viet Nam to “fight alongside the Viet Cong in the struggle against American imperialism,” the Middle East news agency reported Thursday. The semiofficial Egyptian news agency quoted (PLO) chairman Ahmed Shukeiry announcing the plan to send his Arab soldiers to Viet Nam. Shukeiry said the plan would enable armed elements “to study in actual surrounding methods of guerrilla warfare which will be useful in the inevitable war to liberate Palestine,” the agency said.

Supreme Court Rejects Petition INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The Indiana Supreme Court—by the narrowest possible margin—declined to review its earlier opinion relating to operation of a former school bus as a place of prostitution. An attorney for Nelson Noel, whose conviction in Greene Circuit Court on a charge of enticing a female into an immoral place was upheld April 14 by the Supreme Court, argued vainly that the high court was giving “tacit approval to loose trial court practice.” The court voted 3-1, with one judge not participating, against granting a rehearing of the Nbel decision. But Judge Amos Jackson, who supported the April 14 affirming the lower court conviction, dissented this time and voted for a rehearing. However, he was out-voted by Chief Justice Frederick Rakestraw and judges Norman Arterbum and Walter Myers. Hie points raised by the petition for a rehearing included, in addition to the argument about whether a bus is “a place” in terms of the law, the question of entrapment and contained criticism of the high court for what Noel’s attorney said was condonement of error. 'Hie reference was the use of the word “impossible” when it appeared evident the intended word was “improbable.” The petition warned that by excusing this error, the Supreme Court “give tacit approval to loose trial court practice by condoning and excusing errors which result in carelessness.” Error also was alleged in the April 14 opinion in that the 17-year-old former inmate at the Indiana Girls School who was the chief prosecution witness was not “enticed” by Noel into the bus but “entered on the specific command, order and direction of the parole and law enforcement officers of Greene County.” Evidence had been that Noel first talked to the girl at her home about a job and that he later met her at a place called Bald Knob. He was arrested when the girl entered his bus, which contained a cot.

Orders Aid For Tornado Areas WASHINGTON UPI— President Johnson ordered government officials Thursday to “bring every aspect of federal assistance to bear” to help victims of hurricane Alma in Florida and of tornadoes in the Topeka. Kans., area. The President relayed orders through director Ferris Bryant of the Office of Emergency Planning. The White House said Kent Hutton, a federal disaster relief coordinator, had reported from Topeka that “4,000 victims thus far” need help. News Secretary Bill D. Moyers also said that 21,870 Floridians have been given refuge in 191 shelters during the night as hurricane Alma moved up the coast.

The Vacation Bible School of the First Baptist Church will convene on June 20 at 9:00 a.m. f and will end with a picnic on June 25. Daily classes will be held on the six days from 9:00 until 11:30 a.m. On Sunday night an achievement service will be held at which time the students will be given certificates. The teachers for this school have attended workshops at North Terre Haute and Amo churches and are making many interesting preparations. Classes will be available for ages 3 years through the Junior classes. The overall theme for this year is “The Church and The World” with the emphasis of the Nursery Department being placed on the theme “Thank You, God.” The themes for the other sections are: Kindergarten — “Church Is Like A Big Family.” Primary — “Church Is For Everyone.”

Middlers — “Westward The Church.” Junior—“The Church Is People.” The teachers and helpers in the departments are: Director, Mrs. Flossie Rowings; Music Director, Mrs. Betty Aker; Chairman of Refreshment Committee, Mrs. Blanche Carman. Nursery Department: Mrs. Micki Nicol, Mrs. Joyce Braden, Mrs. Nancy Saunders. Kindergarten Depart m e n t: Miss Nancy McMahan, Mrs. Wilma Proctor, Mrs. Marilyn Wagle, Mrs. Wilma Shinn. Primary Department: Mrs. Nila Greenlee, Mrs. Dorothy Nichols, Mrs. Mayme Leslie, Mrs. Freda Collins. Middler’s Department: Mrs. Louise Pershing, Mrs. Barbara Spence, Mrs. Maybelle Rice. Junior Department: Mrs. Lois Clark, Mrs. Dean Lucas, Mrs. Nina Saunders, Mrs. Wilma Ross.

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Name Doesn’t Matter If You Make The Play By Alfred Sheinwold Thirty years ago Ely Culbertson dramatically called a certain bridge play “Hie Coup Without a Name.” Modern writers prefer to call it “The Scissors Coup” because it cuts communications between the two opponets. Call it what you like, as long as you make the play when it is needed. West dealer East-West vulnerable NORTH A 43 V KJ652 O KQJ WEST EAST 4 A875 4 None 5 A743 V Q109* .<>6 O *7542 * KQI10 * A9S5 SOUTH 4 KQJ 10962 None O A 1093 *73 _ West North East Sooth 14 IV 2 * 4 * Double AM PRss^ ^ ^

West opens the king of clubs, and East signals with the nine. West shrewdly decides against leading another club. Instead, he shifts to his singleton diamond. If declarer returns a trump, West takes the ace of trumps and leads the ten of clubs to East’s ace. East then returns a diamond, and West’s ruff defeats the contract. Hiis pretty defense gives great joy to all except two players at the table. Still, South should make his contract in spite of the clever shift to diamonds. CUTS COMMUNICATIONS South must cut communications between East and West. If East never gains the lead, he can never give his partner a diamond ruff. Upon winning the second trick in dummy with the king of diamonds, South must not lead trumps. Instead, declarer leads the king of hearts from dummy. South throws away a club instead of ruffing, and West must win the trick. This maneuver gives West a trick with the ace of hearts but prevents East from getting a trick with the ace of clubs. It Students Snub Secy. McHamara NEW YORK UPI — University commencement exercises normally tend to be routine affairs — except when Robert S. McNamara shows up to receive an honorary degree. The Defense Secretary appeared at New York University in cap and gown to pick up an honorary Doctor of Laws degree and more than 130 students and faculty members walked out of the ceremony in protest against U.S. involvement in the war in Viet Nam. It marked the second time in six days that McNamara had been snubbed by students at commencement exercises. Late Friday, about 20 seniors staged a similar walkout moments before McNamara received an honorary degree at Amherst College in Massachusetts. McNamara displayed no emotion when the protest took place, and smiled when the degree was presented to him. The remaining 6,651 students gave the Defense Secretary a standing ovation.

is better than an even exchange for South because East never gets the lead—which means that West never gets his diamond ruff. After executing this little coup South can easily draw trumps and run his diamonds in safety. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one spade, and the next player passes. You hold: S-A 8 7 5; H-A 7 4 3; D-6; C-K Q J 10. What do you say? Answer: Bid two clubs. You intend to bid hearts next, and finally jump in spades. This should show the strength and the distribution at the same time. An immediate raise to three spades would not tell partner about the singleton diamond.

Combat Police Sent To Hue SAIGON UPI — Premier Nguyen Cao Ky moved a battalion of combat police into the rebel city of Hue today where militant followers of firebrand Buddhist Leader Thich Tri Quang have blocked military convoys in defiance of the government. The troops, armed with tear gas cannisters and clad in camouflage uniforms, moved inside a police compound in the center of the city. They made no immediate attempt to remove the religious altars moved into the streets by the Buddhists as symbols of protest against Ky, but a police source told UPI correspondent Robert Ibrahim they were only “waiting for the word.” Tri Quang, the most militant of the leading Buddhists, became so weak from a hunger strike today that he and his entourage of monks and nuns moved to a hospital. In Saigon, a number of monks and nuns began a fast in support of Quang and the leaders of the Vien Hoa Dac Pagoda here representing the church’s more moderate faction sent a telegram of encouragement. Quang launched his hunger strike Wednesday and vowed he would consume only tea and fruit juices until President Johnson withdraws U.S. support of Ky’s military government. Judge Fife Din INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Judge Eugene M. Fife, Jr., 50, of Marion County Criminal Court 1 died Wednesday night in Veterans Hospital. He had been ailing since last December. Fife was a candidate for renomination in the Republican primary May S but was defeated. He was elected in 1962, and before that was a deputy attorney general and chief tax counsel for the Indiana Revenue Department.

A load Teenager's View By JANET STAUB \ In the good old days when a new catalog was delivered via the postman the whole family would gather round the wishing book to view the new fangled inventions of the day. Automatic washers were seen for the first time by many families through the thick colorful book. Nowadays in modem times when a new catalog is delivered the same usual things are found in them. Because of modem communications inventions are known by many in a short time. Recently in the little black mailbox there appeared a catalog displaying novelties. Some of the things are probably cen times old but to someone who has never even heard of some of them it is interesting. The catalog I’m referring to is designed for every member o f the family including the pets. Portable purse-size mini fans sound especially appeal ing if you are suffering from the heat as you read the catalog. Some people aren’t satisfied with pens that write in four different colors so advertised in a pen that writes in 12 brilliant colors. The newest thing yet is stationery that is perforated in the middle so that when a person writes a letter he is sure of a quick reply. What is really great about this kind of a catalog is the fact that the things advertised

Th« Daily Bannar, Graencastla, Indiana Saturday, Juna 11, 1966

in them aren’t necessities of life but after looking through the wishing book you know that you can’t get along without some of them. BY THE WAY: Greencastle’s Summer Recreation goes into full swing Monday.

Red Chino's Liu On Way Out? HONG KONG UPI — Red China’s President Lau Shao-Chi is believed to be the next target of the group that ousted Peng Chen as chief of the Communist party’s Peking branch early this month, Chinese sources said Thursday. • They said Liu probably will retain his official position, at least for the time being, while his opponents try to whittle away the “pillars of his power,” reducing him to a figurehead. They identified Liu’s principal foes as Premier Chou En-Lai, Defense Minister Lin Piao and Communist General Secretary Teng Hsiao-Ping. All three men are members of the' standing committee of the Politburo, the most important branch of the party.

The Farm Front By BERNARD BRENNER WASHINGTON UPI — The National Commission on Food Marketing is preparing to report that the spread between farm and retail food prices—

most of its processing and distribution costs—could be reduced. The commission’s report if expected to say that making such reductions will be difficult, but that marketing margins can be cut without reducing services to consumers or “unreasonably lowering eanir ings of the food industry-” Even if these margins are reduced, however, the commission believes they will still remain high. The panel says this is because processing and distribution of food is costly, even when it’s performed at top efficiency. The 15-member commission was established by President Johnson to look into the wholt range of food costs—from farm to larder. Its report is scheduled to be published by July L The report is expected to say that the possibility of reducing farm-to-retail price spreads ia greatest in the case of a few products, foods the commission has found to be marketed inefficiently or to be selling at unusually high prices. The commission report did not, at that point, specifically identify any food product. But in another section, the report says inefficiencies were found in distribution of bread and, to a lesser extent of milk. Tha report also indicates that tha cost of retailing meat is boosted in some cases by failure te use centralized cutting facilities.

DISPOSSESSED BY ALMA—This emergency shelter in a high school is one of many jammed by thousands of area residents as Hurricane Alma bears down on St. Petersburg, Fla.

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INJURED WOMAN CARRIED THROUGH TORNADO DEBRIS—A woman, one of the more than 425 persons injured by the tornado that also killed 12 persons, is carried through the debris in Topeka, the capital of Kansas. The fast moving twister smashed hundreds of houses and business places, and left uncounted hundreds of persons homeless.

HORN PLAYS OBOE ST. LOUIS UPI—Paul Horn plays the oboe in the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra.

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