The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 31 March 1967 — Page 4
Tht Dally Bannar. Graaneastla, Indiana Friday, March 31, 1967
School Lunch Menu
School Lunch Menu April $-1, 1M7 Monday Barbecue Sandwich Candled Sweet Potatoes Buttered Com Applesauce Milk
Tuesday Ham A Beans Broccoli Spears Combread A Butter
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G. E. CAMPBELL Certified Hawing AM AudMogist
COMMfICIAl HOTEl EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON er Coll Ike Hefei Any Day
OL 3-5617 BATTERIES AND SERVICE FOR ANY MAKE HEARING AID
Cheese Sticks Fruit Milk
Censure Certain
For Sen. Dodd
MYOMll
By LBSTER I* COLEMAN, M.D.
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Wednesday Ham Salad Sandwich Baked Potato Buttered Peas Prune-Spice Cake Milk
Thursday Chicken & Noodles Mashed Potatoes % Deviled Egg Celery Sticks Fruit Jello Milk Hot Rolls
Friday Toasted Cheese Tomato Soup Cabbage Salad Peach Halve Milk
Banner Ads Pay
WASHINGTON UPI — Sen-| ate investigators will spare Sen.! Thomas J. Dodd the fate of Adam Clayton Powell, exclusion j from Congress, but he will be punished. The decision to seek a form of i punishment short of expulsion was reached at a secret j meeting last week of the sixmember ethics committee that has been investigating the 59-year-old Connecticut Democrat for the past year. The bipartisan panel agreed it I could not exonerate Dodd of the misconduct charges leveled : against him. But the exact punishment the committee will recommend has not yet been decided. It will be thrashed out when committee members return from the Easter holiday recess. It was expected, however, that some form of censure of Dodd’s conduct would be re-
commended with the severity depending on the language the committee adopts.
Health—A Prized Possesion
The punishment could run from a finding of conduct unbecoming a senator, a reprimand, a rubke, a condemnation, or possibly a formal censure. The last time the Senate disciplined one of its members was in 1954 when Joseph R. McCarthy, R-Wis., now dead, was “condemned” for failing to cooperate with and abusing the senators assigned to investigate him.
THE GIFT of good health is too often taken for granted up until the time that w« art deprived of it. This valued pos-
Nurses, aides and attendants are overburdened by chores that are too extensive to be listed. They try to fulfill their obliga-
session is sometimes treated! tions without irritability and, with total e*rele*(Biess and ne- i at the same time, bring serenity
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The major charges with which the report will deal are that Dodd pocketed thousands of dollars in campaign money for his own use, double billed on air fares, accepted the loan of a car from a government contractor, and carried out errands for lobbyist Julius Klein of Chicago.
A
IGA
TENDER, JUICY
Large
Franks
37
GREENCASTLE FOODS, INCORPORATED CORNIR FRANKLIN AT LOCUST PRICES GOOD THRU SAT., SUN., MON.
PLAIN, SUGARED, CINNAMON
Donuts
WISCONSIN NO. 1
MADE FRESH DAILY
Potato Salad Slaw yj Macaroni Salad
OPEN 24 HOURS 7 DAYS A WEEK
POTTO PLANTS. FLOWERS, etc at IGA'
Seed Potatoes
Cabbage Plants Tomato Plants Hybrid Tomatoes Pepper Plants
Geraniums
ftmrtod Mawora f.
Pansies, Petunias, Begonias
Onion Sets Flower Seeds Peat Moss
gleet. It is only when we ar« faced with illness that the full realization of the treasure of good health it appreciated. Illness is a very expensive . luxury, even in 4 these days when Hi some ef the bur- '' den of the expense is borne by national and Or. Coleman state health and welfare programs. The overwhelming cost of » hospital stay can be Staggering. Unless patients give special thought to the difficulty of administering a hospital, they can become irritated and annoyed by what eeems to -be an astronomical bllL When a patient first enters a hospital he is sufficiently uncomfortable and sick 30 that he concentrates his attention only on his medical needs and nurs-
ing care.
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Gather Information Doctors, nurses and laboratory technicians immediately begin to gather all the important information for the diagnosis and treatment of the patient. Few patients are aware that for each of the people he sees there are dozens of unsung heroes in many departments of a hospital who, too, are involved in his care. There ape office personnel, safety engineers, dieticians, X-ray technicians, telephone and elevator operators who all contribute to the wellbeing of the patient agd Wa family*
Can Help Others It Is understandable that the patient, concentrating op his own illness, can hardly he expected to be aware of all ef these people. However, the patient cap, by cooperation and by reducing his demands to reasonable limits, actually increase the benefits to himself and to the other patients in the hos-
pital.
to their patients. Impatience and annoyance towards hospital personnel deprives the patient and his family ef the cheer and emotional support which comes only from a pleasant relationship with the
staff.
Amusing Observation A physician made the amusing observation that when a patient began to complain of the tastelessness of the food, the soggy toast, the cold coffee and the poor telephone service, he was well on his way to recovery. It is at this time, too, that the realisation of the immensity of the hospital costs becomes terrifying and adds to the patlent’e general annoyance. Another observation of importance is that, when the patient has finally been discharged and paid his hospital bill, he develops a new resentment, the doctor’s fee. Builds Hostility Then, suddenly, the ex-patient begins to build a mounting hostility to everyone responsible for his recovery. This is indeed a paradox, when gratitude should really be hia reaction. There are many aspects to being sick and many more to total recovery. Resentfully, the patient may well ask what he has gained by this total experience. He has only been returned to the good health that he may have abused and once taken for granted. • « • SPEAKING OF YOUR HEAL a'H—Medical information Is known to doctors everywhere. Beware of the person who la the sol* possessor ef an expensive formula or food supplement. these columns ore designed to relieve pour fears about health through « better under* standing ef pour mind and body. ATI the hopeful new advances in medicine reported here ore known to doctors everywhere. Your individual medical problems should be handled by your own doctor. We knows you best.
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Joe Kerr, Jaycee Vice-President, adda a net her 51,000 to the thermometer on the Court House lawn for a new total of 58,500 in the Community Park Fund. Larry Elam, Finance Chairman for the project looks on. Contributions for the project are still being received pushing toward the 515,000 goal
Hollywood News
HOLLYWOOD UPI—Female track and field teams are in no danger of giving the Miss America Pageant a run for its money, but producers would have movie-goers believe that Elke Sommer is the East German decathlon champion in a new movie. If the lives of voluptuous Elke became track stars the sport would soon surpass football, baseball and basketball aa national pastimes.
I the UCLA track team,” she j boasted between takes pf the ; movie. “After the first few days pf working out I could hardly walk. But then I got used to it. Now I’m in wonderful physical condition. I do all my own running for the camera. I also throw the javelin and discus, put the shot and hurdle. I high jumped 4 feet, 6 inches.
The blonde, German-born beauty does things to a track uniform that sets some sort of record before the starter’s gun is fired. Perhaps it’s her Teutonic background, but Elke refuses to fake her role as runner, jumper, hurdler and thrower for “The Wicked Dreams of Paula Schultz.”
In older to play the part convincingly, she spent weeks at the UCLA athletic field in an
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effort to get in shape. And Elbe’s shape will be much in j evidence during the film. I “I’m an honorary member of
Stunt girls were hired by the company, but they have found it necessary to stand on the sidelines while Elke goes through her paces. One girl was used for the long jump, but when Elke out-jumped her they decided to stick with the actress.
“It may sound phony, but I really enjoy doing all the physical things,” Elke said. “1 enjoy sports, but I'd rather be an actress,” Elke sighed. “I don’t think girl athletes have as much fun as actresses. “But now that Tm in good shape I’m going to stay that way. Maybe I can do it by going swimming every day. M
Television In Review
By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD UPI — The Tony Awards, Broadway’s prizegiving ceremonies for the theatre season, were televised nationally for the first time Sunday night, and the sum effect was to make one appreciate how much more exciting the movies are nowadays. This impression was chiefly the result of the selection of entertainment material for the ABC-TV broadcast. Put aside the fact that much that is significant in the theatre these days has nothing to do with Broadway. Still, there are some plays of merit, and notable scenes is them. Instead, we were presented with four musiccal numbers, for obvious and sensible reasons — yet three of them, from “I Do! I Do!”, Walking Happy” and “The Apple Tree,” were tiresome and routine entertainments that only seemed to emphasize Broadway’s old age. The only exception was Joel Grey’s gorgeously decadent nightclub number from “Cabaret,” a masterful piece of production and performing that got the Tony Awards telecast off to a level it never again achieved. Unlike the movies’ Academy Awards and television’s Emmys, which go to shows and performers that most of the nation has had a chance to see, the Tony honors quite naturally go to productions that have little immediate personal relevance at the present to the public outside the New York area. For these are stage works in their first-nm engagements — at least in America — and have yet to journey to the nation-at-large, and a network must face up to this inevitable fact, which is unfortunate from a television viewpoint. What to do? Well, one thing to do — and
Auto Accident Rate
one thing that was done Sunday. On the other hand, a definite
MADRID UPI — Automobile accidents claimed 107 lives in Spain during the Easter holiday,
official figures showed Thurs-
day. In addition, 2,476 persons
night — is probably bringing plus for the Tony telecast was were During the same smiles today in Hollywood. For that it originated from a genu- per i 0 d last year highway acin order to give some national ine theater, the Shubert, where- c j denta kmed 95 and injured
appeal to the Sunday night pro-; as the Oscars, for instance, are g 135 duction, the presenters of the 1 presented in a non-theatrical awards had in their number a Civic Auditorium out by the
considerable percentage of performers who, while sometimes associated with the stage, are perhaps best known around the country because of their work in movies and television. These included Kirk Douglas, Lee Remick, John Forsythe, Lauren Bacall, Carol Burnett and Marge and Gower Champion.
Book Memorial To Kate Lovett
The Greencastle Putnam County Public Library has recently received the book, “The Family Album of Favorite Poems,” edited by Edward Ernest. This book was presented to the library by the Boston Club in memory of Kate Lovett. The editor has chosen the poems in this collection to appeal to all members of the family, and they, represent a wide range of literary style and artistic design. They range from the majesty of Shakespeare to the nonsense of Edward Lear. The emphasis is on the poent itself and the, message it has for the reader.
There are sixteen chapters in the book. Some of the themes covered include: inspirational poems, love poems, children’s verse, poems of home and family, humorous poems, hymns to nature and Christmas poems. Most of the familiar verses are included and some have been written only in the last decade.
Poet lovers will enjoy this book.
thoroughly
INSURANCE?
STONER!
Pacific Ocean, not even in Hollywood proper, and without an iota of authentic movie industry flavor.
The hosts for the Tony Awards were Mary Martin and Robert Preston, both of whom appear in “I Do!” One of the unusual personal occurrences of the Sunday night program came when Preston won an award for his part but Miss Martin didn’t win for hers. As it happened, Miss Martin had to come on right after Preston’s award, and she showed the kind of graciousness as a loser that Barbara Harris, w r ho won over Miss Martin, might do well to make a note of. Again, however, the chief fault of the telecast — particularly because of the mundane selection of entertainment — was to make Broadway seem even more tired, outdated and bourgeois than its severist critics maintain it is.
EVANGELIST SERVICE •t tht CLINTON FALLS CHURCH
April 2 thru April 9
SERVICES AT 7:30 P.M.
Evangelist Rev. Floyd Huty
Diracter at Mutic Jamas Ourfc
Pianist—Dayna Crusa
Church Fatter Riffle Howard
GUARDIAN SALE
Tha parsanal praparty af Martin t. Nidiels will ka ••W F*Jj* auction at his farm knawn as Spring VaHay Farm an State laaa 240, '“S^tuTEy; April 8,1967 at 12:30 o'clock D.S.T.
'54 N A A Ford tractor in good condition 2 bottom 14 inch Ford brook plow mountod 4 ft. JD disc and tandem, 1 fleeting drag 1 Fresno roll avar scoop, goad 1 David Bradlay 4'kar tide delivery rake on rubber 1 two bottom I.H.C. put typo break plow an robber 1 two row J.D. corn plantar 1 Ivanhom I ft. double cultipacker 1 Now Idea hay loader 1 horse drawn I.H.C. manure spreader 1 good 2 row rotary hoe 1 J.D. rubber tirod wagon and bod 1 good tractor bun saw 1 six ft. roar mount Ford mower Platform scalos, overhoad gas tank, 50 gal. gas tank 3 ono row whoat drills, corn cuttor, hog oiler, 1 good extension ladder, stratchors, Bull Mind, walking braak plaw, single and dauMo shoval plows, single, deablo and triple trees for horses, halters, some ANTIQUE hand tools, forks, shovels, wrenchas, hooks, rings, ono lot of old saws, cable, rope, wheels, and many other useful artidos.
Terms; Cash.
Nat responsible m Mia af aeddents.
CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK, Guardian
Martin L. Nichols Alton Hurst, Auctioneer lyon A Boyd, Attorneys Bart Wright and Elizabeth Hunt, Clarks
