The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 September 1966 — Page 1
INDIA;,’A STATE LIBRARY
Weather Forecast Sunny, Warmer
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
The Daily Banner
Over 20,000 Renders Daily
«•••»*■• e»M* *• *fc*e wUcfc «• fcav* mm «» feMf*.*
VOLUME SEVENTY-FOUR
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1966Jndiana Sesquicentennial Year 10l Per Copy
NO. 278
Films By Prof. Peeler
Will Be Premiered Here
The premiere showing of a series of new films produced by DePauw University art professor Richard Peeler will be held Friday, Sept. 25, in the university Art Center from 25 p. m. The public is invited.
Chrysler Corp. Joins Ford In Price Increase
Legislative Mantle Is
Filmed in Japan and in the United States, the color movies demonstrate the pottery-mak-ing techniques of several of the two countries’ outstanding pot-j ters.
Two of the films, both sound and color, feature demonstrations by Peeler. Distribution rights to the two films, "Some Ideas About Titles,” and "Ceramic Art: The Coil Method,” have been purchased by Mc-Graw-Hill Text Films.
Those movies shot in Japan, where Peeler served this spring as a visiting lecturer at Kyoto City College of Fine Arts, feature ten Japanese potters, including Toyo Kaneshigi and Kei Fujiwara, Bisen potters. Honored with the govern-ment-bestowed title of National Treasure, Kaneshigi and Fujiwara spent three days with Peeler for the special filming session. Among the American potters filmed and interviewed by Peeler In his study are such names as Vivika and Otto Heino, Warren MacKenzie, Charles Lakofsky and Franz Wildenhain. The public presentation of the films is the culmination of a year’s sabbatical study of Oriental ceramics done by the 40-year-old DePauw Professor. The work was partially underwritten by a grant from the Great Lakes Colleges Association. Peeler was graduated from DePauw in 1949 and taught at Indianapolis’ Arsenal Technical High School for a number of years. He joined the DePauw faculty in 1958. He has compiled a lengthy list of commissions and published articles in addition to having his works reproduced in advertising in such periodicals as The Saturday Evening Post, Better Homes and Gardens and American Home.
Changes Made In State Dept.
PROF. RICHARD PEELER
Supt. Joseph Rammel Rotary Club Speaker
Specialist To Speak At DPU
A one-time research analyst in the Office of Strategic Services, Dr. Michael B. Petrovich, will address a DePauw University convocation Friday at 10 a. m. in Meharry Hall.
Dr. Joseph Rammel, Supt. of
the Greencastle Community Schools, was the guest speaker at the Wednesday meeting of the local Rotary club held at the
DePauw Union building. The speaker discussed: “What
Is Ahead In Greencastle Schools," and said that the local schools are in good condition but must keep abreast of the times. He also faced with larger enrollments and a teacher
tries.
WASHINGTON UPI—President Johnson put the State Department top echelon at full strength Wednesday and provided a logical successor for Dean Rusk if and when the sec-
retary resigns.
The President’s designation of Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach to succeed George W. Ball
as undersecretary of state and ences .
appointment of other men to the No. 3 and No. 4 posts, gave Rusk his first full team since
June.
Katzenbach's appoint m e n t, which caught official Washington by surprise, appeared to have no policy overtones. The 44-year-old father of four is known as a team man. His presence in the highest ranks of U.S. policymakers was not expected to produce any radical shifts and was likely to give Johnson another strong voice at state. Eugene V. Rostow, former dean of Yale Law School who Johnson named to the No. 8 job —undersecretary for political affairs—is rather an unknown quantity to most officials and diplomats here. Rostow succeeds Thomas C. Mann, who resigned last June. Foy D. Kohler, ambassador to Moscow, was Johnson’s choice for deputy undersecretary of state for political affairs. Kohler is regarded by his colleagues as an “old pro” who knows all the ropes. He succeeds U. Alexis Johnson, who is now ambassador to Japan.
The specialist in Russian and shortage. New facihties and Balkan history will discuss “The new me thods of teaching will Changing Face of the Soviet | be introduced in the next dec-
Union and Eastern Europe” in a( j e
his public appearance. , The junior high school buildPetrovich, a professor now at in & cannot be enlarged to acthe University of Wisconsin commodate the expected inwhere he was honored for out- | crease in enrollment during the standing teaching, has traveled next ^ years. The high school extensively in the U.S.S.R. and building can handle 1,000 stuother Communist bloc coun- dents with the addition of six
more class rooms included in
the new addition.
He spent nine months in Bui- There are 517 attending garia in 1964 on an exchange classes at the high school buildbetween the Inter - University | ing . He advocated moving the Travel Grant committee and n j n th grade from the junior the Bulgarian Academy of Sci- | high building to the senior high
building and making 12 class
Alvin Bowes Guest Of Optimist Club
rooms in the present high school gym when the new addition to the high school is completed. There are about 2500 attending the Greencastle schools.
DETROIT UPI—A billion dollar increase in th* national inflation picture appears likely today with the announcement by Chrysler Corp. that it is joining Ford Motor Co. in increasing auto prices. Should General Motors Corp. follow the lead of the other two auto makers, Americans will spend nearly $1 billion more this coming year on automobiles. General Motors planned to announce its 1967 auto prices this morning but American Motors said its announcement was "some time away.” Washington sources speculated on the possibility of the Senate Commerce Committee 1 holding hearings next month to determine if auto price increases are inflated and unfair. Chrysler said Wednesday it will raise the prices of its cars an average of $92 a car, with increases ranging from $39 to the suggested cost of a Dodge Dart convertible to 3359 for Chrysler “300’' hardtops. The price of the sportly Charger was reduced by ?12. The Chrysler announcement came as President Johnson and United Auto Workers president Walter P. Reuther criticized a similar announcement by Ford the previous day.
Slipping Says Morrow
House Bill Would Call Up
Reservists, National Guard
Local Delegates Will Attend Church Sessions
An information gap and a manpower disparity have helped to lift the legislative mantle from Congress and wrap it around the executive limb. This is the belief of a DePauw University political science professor who has just returned to Academe after nine
months on Capitol Hill.
Hoisted out of the ivied halls
WASHINGTON UPI — The by a 8 P ecial leave, Dr. William
Morrow formulated his views while a Congressional Fellow. He spent four months each with Representative Lee Hamilton (D.-Ind.) and Senator Stuart
Symington (D-Mo.).
Administrative domination in the field of legislative initation appears to Morrow to be
House has passed and sent to the Senate a bill to let President Johnson call up to 198,000 reservists and National Guards-
men for active duty.
Australian Air Tragedy Kills 23
Driver Suffers Fractured Leg
When his car left the Manhattan Road pavement and flipped over, Clyde Vinzant, 31, Brazil, was injured, the Putnamville State Police Post reported this morning.
The accident occurred at 2 a.m. about one-fourth mile south of Limedale.
Vinzant was taken to the Putnam County Hospital suffering from a broken right leg.
WINTON, Australia UPI —- An Australian National Airways Viscount air liner, one of its four engines streaking flame crashed on a sheep farm today, killing all 23 persons aboard, officials announced. The plane carried 19 passengers and four crewmen and was en route to Brisbane, 700 miles southeast of Winton. The crash was Australia's first commercial aviation disaster since 1961. Scene of the crash was a sheep farm 12 miles from Winton. The pilot had radioed that an engine was in flames just prior to the disaster, police said. Wreckage was scattered for about a half-mile, authorities reported. In Canberra, Civil Aviation Minister Reginald Swartz told Parliament an investigation team was being flown from
Melbourne to carry out a full
Trooper John Danberry was investigation.
The disaster came three days after a Civil Aviation Department annual report praising the safety record of Australian
airlines.
It was a Viscount airliner which fell near Botany Bay in Australia’s last civil air crash
in 1961.
the investigating officer. Another accident, involving
a car and truck, occurred early this morning one mile west of
Stilesville on U. S. 40. Trooper Danberry reported
that three persons were taken to the Clay County Hospital, in Brazil, In the Hopkins-Wal-
ton ambulance.
Car Hits Front Porch Of Home
Johnson did not ask for the authority and there was no evidence he would use it. He
Delegates from St. Andrew’s wou i d be empowered to call up inevitable. Both branches have
reserve troops as individuals contributed to the reversal of
without declaring a national traditional roles.
emergency.
Church will join nearly 300 Episcopal clergy and lay representatives in Indianapolis on Sept. 23 and 24 for the 129th
Annual Convention of the Indi- The power was incorporated anapolis Diocese of the Epis- in a so-called ’’Reserve Bill of copal Church, according to an Rights” approved Wednesday
announcement today by The
Rev. Gordon Chastain.
blocking of a threatened merger of the Army Reserve and Na-
Those attending from Green- tional Guard,
castle are: Dr. David MacLean,
By sheer weight of bureaucratic numbers and a monopoly of data, the executive arm is forging out front in generating
• • i legislation. With background inmght with Its main purpose the | f ormatIon funneling t0 the e!t .
Vic Hassell, Mrs. Laurel Turk, Tiie ca ^ U P provision was
and Rev. John Eigenbrodt. High on the list of priorities frt this year’s Convention, which will be held at the Marott Hotel and Christ Church Cathedral, will be a report by a Long Range Study Commission appointed to explore means of
added to the bill by the House Armed Services Committee after key members of the Senate protested that the reserve forces had become a draft haven for
some youngsters.
ecutive arm from “thousands of bureaucrats” who represent scores of agencies and commissions, how can 535 Representatives and Senators compete with such manpower and information in proposing adequate legislation, Morrow asks. Congress has helped alter its role too “by being out of touch with the major social forces of the day,” Morrow believes. Rural, non - urban oriented Congressmen have been slow, he feels, to keep legislative pace with the needs of an industrial
The critics said young men with enough “pull” to enlist
streamlining the administrative: while others not so fortunate affairs of the Diocese, comprised were drafted and sent to fight
of 15,000 members and covering in Viet Nam.
th. central and aouthem two- ! I society. He thinks the executive third, of Indiana. F Edward Hebert »«"<* !°» Yearly reports of activities of F ’ Edward Hebert - D - La - the tp ,. .. p ... , JL . - ... Hnuse-nassed hill is aimad! tending the public pulse. Con-
1 sequently, it has tried to fill the legislative vacuum. Reap-
is im-
the various functions of the Diocese will be submitted to the
House-passed bill is aimed: At 133,000 men assigned to
delegates and committee ap- *“»rd unit, — = “'' h pointmrata for the coming year have served less than four Port.onment, however,
will be made. Other business months on active duty
Skirts Distracting
will include the election of eight delegates and alternates to represent the Diocese at the na-tion-wide General Convention to be held in Seattle, Washing-
ton next September.
Convention activities will get underway with a business session at 4 p. m. on Sept. 23 and morning and afternoon sessions the following day. The Convention will close with a late-af-ternoon service at Christ Church Cathedral at which the Rt. Rev. John P. Craine, Bishop, will of-
fer the Eucharist
At about 65,000 who are not
members of organized units, have not had at least 24 months active duty, and have not completed their overall reserve duty
obligations of $ix years. The Senate had forced the
House to act after writing into the $58 billion defense appropriation bill a reserve callup provision that could have affected
proving the situation.
This change in stance Isn't
public, according to Morrow. Perhaps it shouldn't be liked, but it should be understood. Yet, Morrow sees no encroachment on Congressional prerogatives. “The public, led by academic circles, has voiced almost constant criticism for 30 years on
as many as 4T 2 ,„00 men. As of “1" —^
June 30, the reserves of kinds totaled 985,229 men.
Is Destroyed
CARLISLE, England UPI —
A teacher at a school that: _ .. « specializes in secretarial /rlOOnCtOtt
ses warned that some of her|
An auto driven by Lawrence students may flunk if they wear
J. Thurman, 51, city, veered mini-skirts,
from the pavement, grazed a > | tree and hit the front porch of! ^ teacher explained that! the Raymond Sutherlin resi- mini-skirts are “distracting” to, dence, 309 East Berry Street, ■ bosses and distraction is not a
at 6:45 p.m. Wednesday, city secretary s j° b -
police reported this morning. j « ■ i I
Somerset Schedules
tendency toward executive domination,” Morrow observes. “The public doesn’t realize that the role of the legislature has changed in this industri-
A total of 198 freshmen and alized urban society we live in 10 upperclass women have been T he Congressman is no longer
pledged by social sororities at
Local Girls Pledged
Thurman was arrested by Officer Russell Rogers and booked at the Putnam County jail for driving while under the influ-
ence of intoxicants.
Damage to Thurman’s 1960
Annual Homecoming
Lieutenant Governor Alvin Gardner Eggers had the low was estimated at
Bowes was the guest speaker at net to win the cup for the an . the semi-monthly meeting of nual Rotary golf tourney held the Greencastle Optimist Club. last week at thg Windy HiU Mr. Bowes challenged the 1 Country Club. Dick Sunkel, members of the club to continue Art Hansen, Clinton Green, their growth in community Hugh Henry and Rexall Boyd service as well as membership. | tied for second low net. Marion He officially installed Ken Gill- j Wilson won the booby prize
man, Clyde Faatz, and Vic In- with high gross,
man into the membership of
the Greencastle Club. New NOW YOU KflOW members George Smith andi J ^ t . 6 x., . The name of Portland Ore., Evan Pen turf were unable to J _
was decided by the flip of a
$400 by the officer.
The annual homecoming of
the Somerset Christian Church Sunday, Sept. 25 promises to
be a very enjoyable day.
New Car Stolen
Special music is being pre-
the primary instrument of legislative policy initiation. Congress is in a policy consultative role rather than an initionatory one. Of course Congress
the crippled Surveyor 2 moon- 834 Indianapolis Road, Alpha must always remain as an in .
PASADENA, Calif. UPI —
DePauw Universitj - . Greencastle women pledged are: Patricia Ann Longden, daughter of Mr.
Scientists early today destroyed and Mrs. Grafton Longden Jr.,
craft after all hope vanished
Omicron Pi, and Kathryn Lee dependent branch with the right
McFarland, daughter of Mr to - consent to or deny executive t McF ! r ! and ;. 809 requests. This adjustment of
roles shouldn’t be
construed by the public to mean the demise of Congress or that it is losing a war with the ex-
LEESVTLLE, La. UPI —
Two youngsters apparently just Providence and others.
could not wait until the new;
model cars were put on display. There will be Sunda\ School The boys stole a 1967 auto- and P reachin &- Services Sunda y mobile from a local dealer mornin S starting at 10 o’clock, Wednesday and during their a " d a n old-fashioned basket dinflight sideswiped another car,' ner at noon *
drove through a woman's front
for salvaging its lunar softlanding and picture-taking mission.
Project Control at California E. Franklin Street, Delta Gam- traditional
Institute of Technology’s Jet ma.
Propulsion Laboratory fired the
spacecraft’s 8-to 10,000 pound QffcrS Trodfi
main retro rocket at 2:34.29
a. m. PDT (5:34.28 a. m. EDT), SANTAFE, N.M. UPI — apparently causing the vehicle The State of New Mexico to disintegrate. notified its employes WednesA JPL spokesman said the day it would trade them two 15-
pared from Danville, Wayne- | Canberra, Australia tracking minute coffee breaks for a half town, Clermont, New Richmond, station reported losing contact t 0 jfjlrs. Lyndon B. Johnson
Greencastle, Clay City, New with Surveyor 2 at 2:35.07 a. m.
PDT (5:37.07 a. m. EDT).
ecutive branch.
“I think the American people don’t understand the dilemma that confronts Congress. If it consents to what the President wants then it is seen as a rubber stamp. If it obstructs and
7 Pints Needed
attend the meeting and will be installed at a later date.
yard, knocking down her the church wrill give a review
j coin, after its two founders,) shrubbery and a post holding of the past history of the both of them New Englanders, I up her front porch, and crashed church in the afternoon. Come
James Smith was present as could not agree whether to call!head-on into-a house. and spend an enjoyable day of the guest of Ralph Hamilton. | the city Portland or Boston. j The new car was a total loss, singing and fellowship with us.
Robert Williams, Anderson Street, is in need of seven pints of blood at the Methodist Hos-
Mrs. Edward Scobee, clerk of pital in Indianapolis. Anyone
wishing to donate blood may go to the Putnam County Hospital and Mr. Williams will be credited with these donations. His room number is 366 B.
Goldberg In Major Policy Talk
when she arrives at the airport negates what the President today. 1 (Continued on Page 3)
NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK
20 Years Ago
UNITED NATION’S UPI — formed sources said. ; cos of the Philippines that set- i Galhaes exercised Brazil’s traThe United States today form- The sources said Goldberg tlement of the Viet Nam War ditional honor of opening the ally offered to end the bomb- planned to make a ‘‘positive be left to the Asians themselves debate. ing of North \iet Nam and statement” on Viet Nam and in a new political forum to be The Assembly’s Steering
ing in the furnace resulted in
withdraw its forces from South other issues and offer proposals Viet Nam if the Communists to the 118-nation world organi-
take corresponding action. ! zation.
I Hirvlomnfa Irw-tlrOfY
UNITED NATIONS, In. i.ito him tor
created within the U.N. framework. Goldberg was scheduled to delivax* -no in US Tiniiev
Committee Wednesday approved inclusion of 93 items on this year’s agenda.
in South Viet Nam, and peace talks to include the Viet Cong and its political arm, the National Liberation Front. Although President Johnson has said the United States would present a time-table for
Washington has been under i withdrawal of
an exposition of | speech u£ me new General As- ■ picejuix. to speu ou*. i-s i soon as .
U.S. troops as
INDIANA W’EATHER: Mostly sunny and mild today becoming rather windy this afternoon. Fair and cool tonight. Sunny and pleasant Friday. Winds northwesterly 15 to 25 miles per hour this afternoon. High today upper 70s. Low tonight 55 to 60. High Friday upper 70s. Precipitation probability percentages near zero today, tonight and Friday. Minimum 55* 6 A.M 55*
