The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 March 1967 — Page 1

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The Daily Banner

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0^^000 DAILY READERS

VOLUME SEVENTY-FIVE

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1967

UPI News Service

10l Per Copy

NO. 119

Rev. John Carr Will Speak At Gobin Sunday Evening

As a part of a family night gathering, Rev. John Carr, minister of The Church of the Saviour (Methodist) in Indianapolis. accompanied by several lay members of his congregation, will speak on “The Mission of the Church” at Gobin Methodist Church on Sunday night. A pitch-in supper for all participants will serve as a prelude to Rev. Carr’s remarks. Members of the congregation are asked to bring food and table service. Baby-sitting services will be provided for all children under 5. The meeting will begin at 6 p.m. Rev. Carr has attracted attention for his efforts to restructure church life, stressing serious study and emphasis on worship as a prelude to membership. He has been able to experiment with new ideas about the role of the church in present day society because his congregation was an entirely new one, established in a rapidly expanding suburban area of Indianapolis. It is hoped that he may stimulate the members of the local church to re-think their own purpose and work as church people. All the members of Gobin are issued a cordial invitation to participate in this evening of fellowship and discussion together. Gray Is Chosen As Best Teacher A 85-year-old associate professor of economics has been chosen as DePauw University’s best teacher for 1966-67. The award and a $50 check were presented Thursday night J . - Dr. Ralph Gray, a second year member of DePauw’s faculty. - - The cash stipend, presented Gray by the Inter-fraternity Council as one of the main events of Greek Week, is earmarked for purchase of books in the recipient’s field for the DePauw library. Gray is a graduate of Ohio and Syracuse universities. He taught at the University of Arkansas and Ohio University before joining the DePauw economics faculty in 1965. Four more individuals were honored by the governing organization of DePauw’s 13 national fraternities. Rick Jordan, a Dean’s List senior and varsity football player from Richmond, Ind., was named outstanding fraternity athlete for the current academic year. Two administrators, Dean of Students Lawrence Riggs, and Association Dean of Students William McK. Wright, received awards for distinguished service to the fraternity system. Steve Jerrett, a senior from Kirkwood, Mo., and outgoing president of the IFC, received a similar award. Phi Kappa Psi fraternity won two scholarship trophies—one for the top house grade average and one for the top freshman pledge class average. Sigma Nu fraternity received the trophy for most improved house scholastically. Greek Week activities, sponsored by the campus’ fraternities and sororities, will conclude Saturday wtih a work project for G r e e n castle’s Operation Head Start. Priest Acquitted MADRID UPI — Rev. Victor Manuel Arbeloa, a Catholic priest, was acquitted Thursday In city court on a charge of having insulted the National Movement, Spain’s only legal political party, in an article in a church publication. The priest was tried after having written a condemnation of brutality by both sides in the Spanish civil war. 20 Years Ago Delta Theta Tau met with Mrs. Gifford Black. Mrs. Carl Myers was hostess lo the Putnam County Mothers Service Club. Active Chapter of Tri Kappa aeld a business meeting at the same of Mrs. Gordon Sayers.

Nazarenes Schedule Pre-Easter Services

Bitter Cold Hits U.S. Midsection By Unittd Prut* International Bitter cold lashed into the nation’s midsection today, driven by high winds that ended the Southland’s balmy, 90-degree interlude with a sudden lurch. Temperatures along the Gulf Coast early today fell to the 40s and dipped below zero across the upper Midwest and Northern Plains. No region of the nation was spared the late winter fury as gale winds and heavy rains raked the Pacific Coast and swirled inland. This year’s heaviest windstorms caused reported “extreme damage” in eastern Oregon and parts of Idaho. Gale warnings extended along the coast from Washington to Point Arena, Calif., a distance of 700 miles. Winds up to 75 miles an hour were reported in Oregon late Thursday. In the Midwest, winds up to 55 miles an hour drove piercing cold and snow across the Great Lakes. A glue-like sleet coated Chicago Thursday, and snow squalls raged from New York to Indiana. Four inches of snow had fallen at Buffalo, N.Y., and two inches at Pittsburgh and Toledo, Ohio, early today. Cold gripped New England, where a national low of 17 below zero was recorded early today at Houlton, Maine. City Councilman Seeks Reelection Chester L. (Tim) Grimes, incumbent, announced today that he will seek re-election as a city councilman on the Republican ticket, subject to the May primary. Grimes has been employed by General Telephone for the past 29 years. He served in both Europe and the South Pacific during World War H. He is a member of Presbyterian Church, VFW Post 1550, Legion Post 58 and the Elks Lodge. He served on the City Park Board three years and is an honorary member of the Jay-

cees.

Grimes helped organize and coached in Little League and Babe Ruth baseball; organized and coached Pee Wee football the past six years, and coached the local swim team two years. Mr. and Mrs. Grimes are the parents of two daughters, Nancy, 20, and Susie, 15. DePauw Teacher On TV Sunday DePauw’s professor Clifton Phillips and two Hoosier journalists will share the klieg lights Sunday during a television panel on China. The WFBM-TV (channel 6) show, "Communist China and the U.S.: Are We On A Collision Course?” will be telecast at 1:30 p.m. with news director Bob Gamble as moderator. Appearing with the DePauw history professor will be Jameson Campaigne, editor of The Indianapolis Star, and Dr. Harold E. Fey, former editor of Christian Century. One of five telecasts in the station's Great Decision Series, the Sunday show is being sponsored by the Indianapolis Council on World Affairs. Phillips in 1962 spent considerable time in Taiwan. Courses he is teaching this semester on Far Eastern affairs include History of Mainland China and Japanese Civilization, the latter a course in the experimental curriculum.

The Greencastle Church of the Nazarene will have special PreEaster Services beginning Palm Sunday, March 19 at 9:30 pjn. The services will continue at 7:30 each evening through Easter Sunday, March 26. Dr. Leo C. Davis of Bedford will be guest speaker. Dr. Davis served as pastor in Indiana and Florida for a number of years and for the past 18 years has been District Superintendent of the Southwest Indiana District of the Church of the Nazarene. Mr. Davis has traveled abroad in many countries, including the Holy Land, and will be showing colored slides of his travels. Larry and Phyllis Richards of Indianapolis will be in charge of the musical program. Mr. and Mrs. Richards are talented musicians and in great demand for revivals, conventions and special ocasions. They play the piano, accordion, and sing solos and duets and enjoy working with the choir. Everyone in the community is invited to all of these services of fellowship and inspiration. Volume Honors Dr. R. W. Pence A new book of short stories by DePauw University’s Professor Oliver W. Robinson is scheduled for fall publication by Branden Press of Boston. The collection is entitled **I Dream in Irish: Stories in Honor of Raymond Woodbury Pence and His Fifty Years of Teaching Creative Writing at DePauw University.” Dr. Pence is emeritus professor of English at DePauw, former head of the department and the former teacher and faculty colleague of Professor Robinson, a 1933 DePauw alumnus. The book contains twelve new short stories and six other stories that have previously been published in magazines and earlier books. The forthcoming Branden publication is Robinson’s tenth book. Earlier works are five operettas, new editions of three of them, a novel “Triumvirate”; a collection of short stories entitled “The Pillared Porch Stands Tall”; “Angry Dust: The Poetry of A. E. Housman,” a critical essay; and a novella, “Mad as the Mist and Snow.” Professor Robinson joined the DePauw faculty in 1947 after serving as head of the English department and academic dean at Vincennes University. Predicts Future BLOOMINGTON, 111. UPI — Dr. Max Kaplan of Boston said Thursday the American Negro will be the most important factor in the future of the performing arts. Kaplan, former director of the arts center of Boston University and the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, said “When Negroes begin moving into the universities in a big manner the country as a whole will have a new measure of creativity."

St. Patrick’s DAY

Pressure Against Hanoi Viet Cong Will Increase

Would Put Government Out Of Grain Economy

Special Services Slated For Fillmore Christian

Sure, and it's time for wearing of the green! Friday, March 17 Irish Celebrate St. Patrick's Day DUBLIN UPI — The sturdy sons of Erin praised St Patrick and other greats of Dublin’s history today with frothy pints of stout that sometimes sloshed on fragile shamrocks as dearly priced as an Irish rose. As in the days when Lord Nelson’s monument towered in O’Connell Street there was bawling and brawling and bat ladeering and the names of Joyce and Moore and Burke and Emmet and Kennedy drifted in lilting" brogue out of smokey pubs. The celebration of the national feast honors the saint who brought Christianity to Ireland 1,500 years ago—and who made the shamrock what it is today by plucking one from a crack In a castle floor to explain the Holy Trinity to a heathen king. Religious ceremonies, special sporting events and the biggest industrial parade in Dublin’s history filled the day. Hie Republic’s 84-year-old president, Eamon de Valera, sent greetings to “our kin and fnends of Ireland all over the world.” He said, “on this day of common pride in our historic nation, we remember them all.” Cardinal Will Retire In 1970 BOSTON UPI—Richard Cardinal Cushing announced Thursday he is retiring as archbishop of Boston on his 75th birthday, Aug. 24, 1970. The Roman Catholic archbishop, in a news conference, also confirmed earlier announcements that he will go to Peru to lead missionary work after his retirement. Asked if he would remain in Boston with the church if the Pope requested him to, Cardinal Cushing replied: “Not as archbishop of Boston.” A man 75 years old can never handle the position of archbishop,” he said. “It’s absurd.” Apparently the cardinal’s health was a factor in his retirement plan.

Holy Week Is a very special time in the Christian Year. It observes the Passion of the Lord Jesus Christ. It remembers His last week upon earth, and observes the sacrificial death of the Lord upon the cross. In observance of this remembrance, the Fillmore Christian Church is planning special Holy Week Services on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday evenings next week, March 2022. These three nights for God will include Scripture and Prayer, appropriate hymns, inspira-

tional poetry, and messages by laymen of the church upon the theme: “What the Easter Season Means to Me.” Monday evening, Ray Allen Nichols and Kenneth Sutherlin will speak. Paul Salmon and Leon Arnold will give the meditations on Tuesday evening. Wednesday night speakers will be Carl

Crews and Clarence Cooper. Everyone in the community

is invited to these Holy Week observances which will be only 45 minutes long and begin at

7:30 p. m. each evening.

Annual Income Plans Outlined By Reuther

State Trooper Is Kiwanis Speaker Kiwanian Dale Shoup introduced Indiana State Police Sergeant Bovenschulte at the Kiwanis noon luncheon Thursday at the DePauw University Student Union Building. Sergeant Bovenschulte explained the operation of the new speed timing device “Vascar” being used by the State Police to determine highway speeds of motorists. The sergeant stated that failure to yield the right-of-way and following too close to the car ahead were major causes of highway accidents. He also stated that 55 per cent of fatal accidents involved drinking

drivers.

Gilbert Wiseman was introduced as a recent new member and Bill Jones was the guest of Earle Boyd. Popularity Slips MADISON, Wis. UPI — The Wisconsin Agriculturalist Magazine reported Thursday a poll

which he said one of the top priority demands would be a guaranteed annual wage for his

auto workers

of farmers showed President statement made last week in

Johnson’s popularity has slip-

ped.

Compared with 53 per cent approval the year before, only 25 per cent of the Wisconsin farmers responding gave Johnson a vote of confidence in 1966. “The Vietnam conflict seems to be the basic reason why," t' e magazine said.

0ES Notice

Called meeting of Cloverdale Chapter No. 369 Monday evening at 7 p. m., March 20, for practice for installation. Evelyn McKamey, W M.

WASHINGTON UPI—President Johnson’s forthcoming Guam conference is expected to produce an order for another turn of the screw intensifying military pressure on Hanoi and the Viet Cqng. According to authorities here, this will consist of adding a few more industrial targets to th« list to be attacked by Navy and Air Force planes and plotting the most effective use of troop reinforcements being sent into the conflict. Top administration officials, encouraged by increasing evidence of lower Communist morale and supply difficulties, are hoping that the gradual increase In punishment will crack Hanoi’i refusal to talk peace on acceptable terms. While emphasizing that Hanoi still has given no “signal” that it is willing to scale down the tempo of the conflict and come to the peace table, officials say there Is evidence the North Vietnamese may be moving in that direction. They declined to disclose the evidence. Officials declare that there is no foundation to speculation that the Guam meeting will lead to any major escalation of the war. And they say that no consideration Is being given at the top level here to pushing American troop strength beyond the estimated 470,000 in Vietnam by the end of 1967. Administration officials are touting the meeting as one to be held primarily for a “changing of the guard.” Johnson’s new choice for ambassador to South Vietnam, Ellsworth Bunker, and his deputy, Eugene M. Locke, will have a chance to confer with military leaders and be'briefed by the diplomats they are succeeding — retiring Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and his deputy, Foreign Service Officer William J. Porter. Officials said Bunker, - at present ambassador - at - large, and Locke, who has been serving as U.S. envoy to Pakistan, will take over their new posts sometime in April. The President and his aides, in addition to reviewing the progress of the military effort, plan to discuss the success achieved so far in the program of “pacification” and rehabilitation being carried out in territory regained from the Com-

munists.

On Wagon For Love Of Dog

LONDON UPI _ Bob Buckley went on the wagon Thursday for the love of his dog. Buckley, a mechanic, took the pledge in court Wednesday and

UPI — Alojs Klasnic, 31, a a J ud ff e in turn ruled Buckley’s Yugoslav exile, Thursday began! A1 satian dog would not have to

an 18-month prison term for i be destroyed,

trying to bomb the Yugoslav \ The dog had attacked two consul-general’s office in Mu-1 & ara 8e customers while Buckley

nich last August. Klasnic was was out at a pub.

Skilled trades workers, whoi arrested before he could carr y| Buckle y said he would give up

out the bombing, authorities drinking and keep his eye on

said. I the dog.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. UPI —United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther today sets forth his guaranteed annual income plans to UAW skilled trades members, a faction of the union generally more receptive to higher hourly

wages.

Reuther, who began his career as a tool and die maker, wp~ speaking to the 1,600 delegates to *he UAW’s skilled trades conference on what he considers should be contract demand priorities in negotiations with the auto industry beginning this summer. Two hours were set aside for

Reuther’s speech,

Immediately after his speech, Reuther planned to hold a news conference to further explain the UAW’s demands in the upcoming negotiations and to discuss his feud with AFL-CIO President George Meany. Before tl.e day is over, the conference is expected to adopt a resolution endorsing Reuther’s action in the split with Meany and authorizing him to pull the UAW out of the giant labor confederation if Reuther should

so choose.

Reuther is on the spot for a

WASHINGTON UPI — The nation’s biggest farm organization Thursday unveiled a drastic new plan to get the government out of the grain economy. The plan, drafted by the American Farm Bureau Federation, would wipe out the government’s production controls, payments tq farmers, and price support programs for grains, beginning with 1968 crops. The result. Farm Bureau officials said, would be to eliminate the Agriculture Department’s power to pile up grain stocks through support operations and then use them "to wreck farmers’ markets.” Rep. Thomas B. Curtis, RMo., said in a separate statement he would introduce the bill in the House and predicted it would lead to “greater prosperity, greater farm income, and a more dynamic farm sec-

tor.”

The Farm Bureau, a long-time critic of federal farm controls and Johnson administration farm payment programs, has been advocating elimination of grain acreage controls for at least a decade. But its latest proposal, coming at a time when government grain stocks have dropped out of the “surplus” category and officials are calling for increased production, was described by Farm Bureau spokesmen as the most “clean-cut” plan for eliminating government influence in agriculture.” The plan would replace the present grain controls and supports with a system of govern-ment-insured marketing loans to grain growers from private banks and other lending insti-

tutions.

The loans could go only up to 90 per cent of estimated market prices and would have to be repaid by the farmer in eash

with interest.

The new loan system — in sharp contrast to the present price support loan program would not allow farmers to turn their crops over to a government agency in lieu of repaying the loan. Thus, possible future surplus buildups in government bins would be avoided,

Farm Bureal officials said. Begins Sentence

KARLSRUHE, Germany

have veto power over the entire industry contract for the first time this year, are afraid that Reuther will sell out on their own list of wages priorities to get the annual guarantee. But Reuther hopes to convince the 200,000 skilled trades workers in the 1.4-million-member union that this year will be the year he finally meets

their demands.

Canton Controlled By Red Army

HONG KONG UPI — The Communist Chinese army has taken over almost total control of Canton, south China’s most important city, intelligence sources and travelers report. The scope of the army’s influence in Canton dovetailed official Communist reports it was putting troops side-by-side with factory workers and farmers in a “big brother is watching” move to crush violence and

spur production.

Radio reports from several provinces behind the Bamboo Curtain disclosed the army, pivotal element in China’a in-

ner power battle, was expanding its already dominant role by dispatching troops and militiamen to factories and farmlands. ^ The broadcasts said the soldiers were helping with production and drilling workers in the arts of “Mao’s thoughts.” Shanghai Radio, meanwhile, lamented that some primary and secondary students in Communist China’s largest city are balking at orders from Peking to return to the classroom. The broadcast admitted some teachers also were playing hooky. Quoting an editorial in the

Peking- controlled Shanghai newspaper Wen Wei Pao, Shanghai Radio said the truant students had too much fun roaming around the country as Red Guards and now find the classrooms dull. The Chinese Communist party ordered primary and secondary students in Shanghai, Peking and other areas to return to school a few weeks. There was still no indication when university-level students would be ordered back to classes. The most apparent area of army dominance wee Kwaog-

tung Province in southeast China, where travelers have consistently reported a virtual army takeover in recent days. A Canton Radio report said the troop commander in Canton, the provincial capital city of 1.5 million, had “dispatched large numbers of propaganda teams into the factories to propagate the thought of Communist party Chairman Mao Tsetung.” The Communist broadcast also said Canton army leaders “sent out large numbers of troops to the villages to assist in spring planting.’*

NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK

INDIANA WEATHER: Partly cloudy, rather windy and cold today with chance of a few light snow flurries. Generally fair and cold tonight. Sunny and continued rather cold Saturday. Winds northerly 15 miles per hour with gusts to 25 today, diminishing tonight. High today 28 to 33. Low tonight 10 to 15 above zero. High Saturday mid 30s. Precipitation probability percentage 5. Outlook for Indiana for Saturday night and Sunday: Increasing cloudiness and warmer. Minimum 17* 6 A.M 22® 7 ......... ............................................. 22 8 A.M 17» 9 A.M. 20® 10 ........................................................................................ 25 ® 11 A.M 25® i 12 Noon 28® 1 P-M 29®