The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 August 1966 — Page 7

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National

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By LYLE WILSON ty United Press International Federal bureaucrats believe they have found a satisfactory substitute for federal law with which to compel a racial mi* in Northern suburban elementary schools where neighborhood patterns tend to establish allwhite classrooms.

•Hie substitute Is money. These Washington bureaucrats are unable to find in the Constitution. in any act of Congress or in rules of the Supreme Court any authority to compel these nearly all-white communities to accept a racial mix in their public school systems. To the contrary, the Congress at least, appears to be against it. Lacking any law, the bureaucrats reach for money which is their remedy for all ills, a miraculous blend of Hadacol, Peruna and Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.

Civil rights zealots of all races and, most notably, the civil rights zealots among the bureaucrats happily have interpreted laws and Supreme Court decisions forbidding racial segregation to be laws and Supreme Court decisions requiring racial integration or a racial balance in the public schools.

Civil Rights

Pickets Parade

WAUWATOSA, Wis. UPI — Cicil rights pickets paraded for the 11th straight night Monday in this racially tense Milwaukee suburb and the protests apparently will continue. About 900 Negro pickets demonstrated against a judge who refuses to sever his ties with an all-white fraternal organisation while a force of 400 rifle-armed National Guardsmen kept hostile spectators and counter-pickets, including Ku Klux Klansmen, at bay. Five persons were arrested. The Rev. James E. Groppi, a whits Roman Catholic priest who has led the Negro picketing, promised the protests will continue.

lung cancer among cigarette heart disease.

smokers “is attributable to cigarette smoking." Levine, chief of the medical chest service of the Cook County Hospital’s Hektoeq Institute for Medical Research, said 80 per cent of the 400 lung cancer patients treated annually at the hospital suffer from “squamous cancer”, which affects certain cells. “I have never seen a single case of the squamous-cell lung cancer in a person who has never smoked,” he said.

Something To Palm Reading

In another article, Dr. Filton Alter and Schulenberb of the

University at they found prints among

said abnormal palm 28 infants who

suffered dnpagt vttea their mothers contracted German measles during pregnancy.

Cancer From Smoking Soars

CHICAGO UPI — Lung cancer caused by cigarette smoking has reached almost epidemic proportions among males, a leading medical researcher said today. Dr. Harold Levine said the rapidly increasing incidence of

CHICAGO UPI — What the gypsies claim to have known for hundreds of years, medical researchers have just discovered: there’s some thing to this palm reading business. Two articles in the current Journal of the American Medical Association said variations in palm prints may provide clues to heart disease and birth defects.

— Dr. Tsunekazu Takashina of Osaka and Dr. Susumu Yorifuji of Kobe—reported he found a significnat number of palm print abnormalities among persons suffering from congenital

That Is a misinterpretation

against which the Northern suburbs probably are defenseless. They are defenseless because there is not much solid challenge to the extremists' Insistence that the Congress and the courts have ordered Intant integration or else. Congress and the courts, in fact, have joined only to forbid segregation in almost all circumstances, most emphatically under any circumstance wherein • local, state or other governmental authority is In any way a party to the segregation, a responsible party, that is.

But when racial segregation Is beyond reach of any law now on the books or likely soon to be. Federal bureaucrats are teaching with money toward that kind of segregation. They Will succed more often than they fail in their effort to buy Off opponents of integration or racial mixing in those schools which are outside the scope of existing civil rights statutes. When these local officials balk, federal officials can withhold federal subsidy funds. The bureaucrats believe the locals cannot withstand that kind of pressure, and they probably are right about that however wrong and unwise their methods may be. The principal spokesman of this plan to substitute available federal money for lack of federal law is Harold Howe n, U. S. commissioner of education. Howe is determined to impose racial and social integration on the plush suburban public schools. He suspects that the concept of the neighborhood school, which is basic to American elementary education, must be scrapped. Howe is impatient of opposition. Northern suburbanites who would know what their government plans for their elementary schools should ask their congressman for a copy of Howe’s recent speech in Washington, D. C., entitled “A New Benchmark for Education." The text is on pages 15779-15781, July 21, 1966, Congressional Record. Howe has plenty of money, and his is on the move. The Supreme Court ruled 80 years ago that use of federal funds to buy submission to federal regulation was unconstitutional. In holding the New Deal’s Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA) to be an unwarranted invasion of states rignts to regulate local activities, the court said that AAA was "at best a scheme for purchasing with federal funds submission to federal regulation in a subject reserved to states.” That is Howe’s program to purchase with federal funds submission by local authorities to the bureaucrats’ racial mix plans for Northern suburbs. It must be assumed that regulation of elementary schools is a state responsibility or anyway, that is once was. Of course we have a new Supreme Court now so what was unconstitutional in 1935 when the court ruled on a a a may no longer be unconstitutional at all. On the contrary, in its wisdom, our new court may find, again, that preceding justices were all wrong.

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aq n Abner Doubleday, one of the regui ars who was reduced from major general to colonel by the Army reorganization in 1866, was not a conspicuous figure after the war in the game he was credited with inventing. The great stimulator of organized baseball in 1866 and thereafter was Henry Chadwick—an Englishman brought up on cricket. Chadwick, as writer and editor for the nationally circulated theatrical and sports weekly, New .York Clipper, formalized the boxscore and fostered collection of endless comparative statistics. He conceived a national championship game for a trophy put up by The dipper annually. With the war over, and thousands

*f new “fans'* having been made by seeing games |p soldier camps. Oie championship Destirrag wide attention in 1866. The Brooklyn Atlantics, matched on their home grounds (the first baseball park to be enclosed) with the Philadelphia Athletics, defeated the visitors 27 to 17. One of the Atlantics, Dickey Pearce, introduced the intentional bunt in 1866 (as W* know from Chadwick). That 2? to 17 score suggests that he didn't have in the championship game emulators of the bunting tactic. CLARE EINNAIRD

Philadelphia and Brooklyn nines who were the combatants for the national basehall championship, 1868. An engraving for Harper’s Weekly from a photo. [Courtesy of Cousley Historical Collection, Englewood, N.J.] The initials on the playing shirts of the Brooklyn lads stand for Atlantic Base Ball Club. Underneath are crossed bats figure. Note that most of the players sport trim

mustaches.

Hid Bally Bannar, Grnancastle. Indiana f Tuasday, August 30, 19M

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Labor Day. Time for Hoosiers to wear their seat belts. Time to show what Indiana can really do to make its highways safe. Time to “buckle up and live.” You’ve heard it from your Indiana Traffic Safety Council, from state and local officials, from hundreds of interested businesses and organizations.

within 25 miles of the driver’s home. So, even if you’re just going on a picnic over Labor Day, buckle up on the way. Traffic deaths hit pretty close to home.

General Motors is happy to join in this all-out effort. Because seat belts save lives. The evidence is conclusive. In case you haven’t seen the statistics recently, take a look.

Buckle « belt and stay where you are. Accident investigations show that ejection from the vehicle is the leading single cause of driver and passenger fatalities. Chances of being killed in an accident are 2 l A times greater if you’re thrown from the car. Buckle a seat belt and stick around.

All these statistics from the National Safety Council and detailed traffic and accident reports mean just one thing. If you buckle a seat belt when you start on a trip, the chances are greater that you’ll be alive to unbuckle it at the end. That includes the driver and his passengers, from grandmothers, to teenagers, to the kids in the back seat.

Watch the speed limit and keep this in mind. 75% of all automobile accidents occur at speeds below 40 mph. So wear your seat belts—low on your hips and snug—even if you’re just creeping along.

Draw a 25-mile circle. Put your house in the middle of the circle. Now remember: 3 out of every 4 traffic deaths occur

The clincher. What caused the accidents that resulted in 26 deaths during the July 4th weekend in a neighboring state? Intensive investigation proved the only cause was driver failure. And none of the victims had their seat belts fastened when they were available. At the risk of sounding like a broken record: study after study proves seat belts save lives.

Indiana can reverse the mounting Labor Day traffic toll, if everyone wears a seat belt. Will you do your part? Buckle up and live.

One of the most important things we've learned about safety over the last 58 years

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SaT* driving depend* on three things.

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