The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 August 1967 — Page 4

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Pag* 4

Tha Dally Bannar, Oraancastla, Indiana

Monday, August 7, 1967

No style leader

Supreme Court Justice 01,1 ^ is

Winter fashion is for closer fitting clothes j ^^,1, j s hospitalized " Ied bv <ir '

Parts XJPI Is the Paris closely fitted clothes, including fashion dictator dead? No one {belts. Even Coco Chanel and designer could dictate a "look” j Balenciaga cut outfits closer to during the winter fashion i the body. shows. Everyone went his own' Otherwise the styles can be W ay. as you w r ant. Hemlines wander Haute couture is far from | all over the place. Suits have dead, as some critics say, but narrow or pleated skirts with

In a state of change and confusion. This fall the young

long belted jackets or shorter jackets with flared skirts. Some

“space age'* designers such as. jackets are loose, others fitted. Pierre Cardin and Andre Cour- Daytime dresses are belted reges still are running on a! and fitted at most salons but separate track from the older, i Givency and Balenciaga saved sophisticated look of Hubert de- ! the unbelted, loose shift dress Givenchy and Cristobal Balenci-; from extinction. a g a . Pants dresses and divided The only trend one can find I skirts with suits appeared in in all the houses after two j many showings and were given weeks of showings is for more j the official nod for daytime

wear by Givenchy and Balenciaga. The little black cocktail dress is still around. Long evening gowns were less numerous in the shows, not so lavishly beaded as usual and more narrow. Many started at the knee in front and swoped to the floor in back. The ostrich population must have been decimated to take care of all the ostrich I was admitted to the hospital capes, hems and dresses, in the Friday but he is still confined to shows. ; be dMany houses apparently pine There was no indication of for the 1930s from the deluge heart trouble, the spokesman of satin belted dresses, uneven said. hemlines, chunky higher heels, Clark was on a world tour maxi-skirts and Balenciaga’s {under U. S. State Department high round shoulders. iauspinces and has been in the

BANGKOK UPI — Retiring U. S. Supreme Court Justice Tom C. Clark has been hospitalized with a stomach ailment and general exhaustion, the U. S. embassy announced today. An embassy spokesman said the condition of the 68-year-oW Clark has improved since he

Thai capital since Wednesday.

He previously visited Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and Indonesia.

Try and Stop Me

RICHMOND UPI — A fourstory hotel which was destined for demolition was destroyed by fire Saturday in the downtown

area.

He was scheduled to

The Wayne Hotel, which had been closed, and other buildings

leave ! were scheduled to be torn down

today for New Delhi but the embassy said it would be several days before he will be released from the U. S. Army’s 5th Field Hospital.

Clark wife.

is traveling with his

Pilot is forced at gunpoin to fly to Havana Cuba

Before leaving the United States, Clark announced his retirement from the Supreme Court to avoid a posible con- \ flict of interest with his son, { newly appointed Attorney Gen-! eral, Ramsey Clark.

soon to make way for a new civic center across the street from the Wayne County Courthouse. The blaze was confined to the building by 70 Richmond firemen and six pieces of equipment. Traffic in a 12-block area was tied up, including that on U.S. 40 w’hich runs in front of the hotel. Fire officials were not able to pinpoint the cause of the blaze immediately, but they said a

HAVANA UPI — “Communist guerrillas” Sunday hijacked a Columbian DC4 airliner carrying 78 persons, four of them Americans, and forced the pilot to land in Havana. Cuban authorities the the plane probably would be permitted to leave today with its crew and passengers. Five armed men, described by the pilot of the Aerocondor Airlines flight as Communist guerrillas, hijacked the plane

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while it was over the Caribbean on a regular domestic flight. The pilqt said he was forced at The hijackers were identified gunpoint to fly to Havana, as four Columbians and an Ecuadorian. They asked the government of Premier Fidel Castro for permission to remain in Cuba. An official statement said the five were “at the disposition of Cuban authorities” without indicating whether their request would be granted. The five crew members and the passengers were fed and temporarily housed Sunday night at Havana’s hotel Nacional while their plane was readied

to resume its flight.

The plane was flying from Barranquilla to the Colombian island of San Andres in the Caribbean when it was hi-

jacked.

Names of the persons on the flight were not released but informed sources said four Americans, a Briton and an Austrian were among the passengers. The rest were said

to be Colombians.

The Colombian pilot, identified as Rafael Madero, said the plane and the passengers were

being treated well by

authorities and all were “ii

perfect condition.”

He said the Castro govern

morning. “Nobody w r as frightened,” one passenger said, “because they didn’t know what was going on." Another passenger said th* pilot announced the plane was diverted about 20 minutes

before the scheduled landing in San Andres, but did not say where the flight was going. The passengers learned they were in Cuba only after the plane touched down at Havana airport.

Clark s replacement will be bus driver reported seeing chil- i Thurgood Marshall, the highest I . . .. . . . . , Z mx * -kt x xx ,, dren run from the vacated hotel

court’s first Negro justice. Mar-

shall’s appointment must be approved by the Senate.

not long before the alarm was

sounded.

Own people first says Kennedy

WASHINGTON UPI — Sen. Robert F. Kennedy feels the United States should commit far more of its resources to helping “our owm people in the ghetto” and let South Vietnam carry the burden of its war against the Communists. “I think we have to do things in Vietnam,” Kennedy said Sunday. “But I think also it is more essential that we do what is necessary here for our own people—preserve the liberty of

our own people.”

The New York senator noted that this country "spends more in a month in Vietnam than we do on the poverty program” in

a year.

“If we can spend $24 billion a year to preserve the liberty, freedom and future of the peo- | pie of South Vietnam, we ■ should spend at least a fraction

the fighting. I think they should be carrying the war. "As President Kennedy said in 1963, we can help them win it, but we can’t wrin it for them. I think that they should carry the burden of the fighting and 1 we should help them.”

Plans encyclical on birth control

j permitted to leave Monday

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Cong sustains Heavy losses SAIGON UPI _ Some 754 Viet Cong guerrillas were killed and 1,520 of their sympathizers captured during the largest American-South Vietnamese military operation of the war in the Mekong Delta, U.S. officials

said today.

The joint allied force reported the guerrilla mopup during a two week sweep around the

Cuban 1 ° f that ° n thC Uberty ’ freedo ~ 1 j delta provincial capital of My and future of the people of the; Th0( 35 milea southwest of Sai-

gon, officials said.

More than 15.000 American and South Vietnamese troops took part in four coordinated phases of the operation. U.S. casualties were reported as eight killed and 33 wounded. The South Vienamese force, which did most of the fighting, suffered “light to extremely light” casualties, the officials

said.

A team of 12 American battalions and 18 South Vietnamese kicked off the operation in the last week of July. It was the most extensive sweep ever

United States.

Kennedy, interviewed on tele-!

J ^, . vision Meet The Press-NBC, ment assured him the passen- .. , . .. .

” . ' said he was not suggesting that

gers, plane and crew would be

the United States pull out of Vietnam. But he said he would “only favor doing more in Vietnam when the people of

South Vietnam do more.” Nothing that American casu-

: alties in Vietnam have been : running considerably higher

than South Vietnamese losses,

{Kennedy said he was “distres-

sed that our casualties continue to go up and theirs con-

tinue to go down.

“This is different than it was undertaken in the delta, "where

a year ago,” he said “I think whole provinces remain under

they should be doing some of j Viet Cong control.

VATICAN CITY UPI—Pope Paul VI will publish his longwaited encychcal on birth control during the synod of bishops meeting here Sept. 29-Oct. 24, a well-informed Vatican source said today. “We do not yet know what the encyclical will say,” the sources said. "But it is expected Elgin's city council blamed ELGIN, ILL. UPI—An Office of Economic Opportunity investigator planned today to report to war on poverty officials that Elgin’s city council is trying to make OEA "the scapegoat” for racial tension here. Richard Fullmer, the investigator, was sent here Saturday by poverty war officials at the request of Mayor E. C. Alft. Alft and the four-member city council charged that local OEA leaders were involved in the stoning of a police car July 31 and six fire-bombings Friday night. Fullmer said an official report on his investigation would be released today or Tuesday by the OEO, which is headed by R. Sargent Shriver.

Demo chairman is optimistic INDIANAPOLIS UPI —Democratic State Chairman Gordon St. Angelo Sunday told Democrats that they have an "excellent chance” of winning municipal elections in the "vast majority” of cities and towns in November. St. Angelo made this report to a meeting of about 120 Democratic mayors and mayoral candidates attending a party workshop at the Sheraton-Lin-coln Hotel In IndianapoUs. The state chairman said he based his optimism on a tour he presently is making of Indiana cities. The workshop covered police and police protection, local park development, federal funds and public relations and political advertising. Other speakers included Mace Broide, administrative assistant to Sen. Vance Hartke, and Frank Meech, Indianapolis Mayor John Barton's chief assistant.

that the pontiff will not make any drastic change in the church’s position on birth control and will generally uphold the church’s traditional stand.” Catholics are frobidden from using any artificial means of limiting the number of their children—such as birth control pills and other contraceptive devices. They are allowed to play the size of their families using the rhythm method, based on fertile and infertile days in a woman’s menstrual cycle. Commenting on a Newsweek magazine report Sunday that Pope Paul’s encyclical would “make a series of fine doctrinal distinctions which theologians are expected to Interpret as favorable,” the source said: "I don’t know what they mean, especially by the word favorable. If they are suggesting that all theologians want the church’s postion on birth control changed they are wrong. "The Pope has many times stated his position that approving artificial birth control devices is not the way to solve the population problem — but rather that man must do more to increase food productivity.”

By BENNETT CERF■'fTARlETY,'* the theatrical weekly, tells of a harassed ▼ father, badgered into obtaining some popcorn for hi* youngsters, who could only think of a theater as the nearest place to purchase same. He bought two heaping bags of it in the theater lobby, then assured the manager, “If the popcorn’s OK, my wife and I will come back tomorrow night to see the movie.”

• • •

When Benjamin Disraeli was Britain’s prime minister under Queen Victoria, he had to face up to complaints, notes his biographer, Robert Blake, that do not sound too unfamiliar today: the faflure to contain Russia, the prevalence of wars, the iniquities of colonialism, the neglect of the aged and ailing, the failure to properly educate the young .... A few observations of Disraeli’s: “A practical poliUcian is one who capitalizes on the errors of his predecessors”; “Every woman should marry—and no man”; “Mr. Gladstone seems to think that posterity is a pack horse, always ready to be loaded”; “When X want to read a novel, I write one.” Queen Victoria liked flattery; Disraeli laid it on with a trowel. Knowing that Her Majesty was an inveterate diarist, he frequently addressed her with “We authors, Ma’am.” A history professor at a university in Philadelphia is so meticulously fair that before marking an examination essay, he always turns back the outside blue cover so he cannot know the student’s name, and possibly be unconsciously influenced in some way. His wife, however, taking his course, knows his habits backwards and forwards. She signs every examination at the bottom of the last page, ’T love you. Sue.” C 1OT, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Feature# Syndicate Predicts committee will tighten up on control

Race violence in Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH UPI — Police superintendent James Slusser today blamed a weekend spree of rock throwing and window smashing in the city’s Oakland section on an oversize crowd at a rock ’n’ roll concert and poor bus service. Small groups of youths, white and Negro, broke three store front windows, hurled bottles through bus windows and threw rocks early Sunday morning while a crowd of 3,000 milled I near Forbes Field after the j concert. “With that many people you are bound to have trouble,” Slusser said. He said dispersal of the crowd j was difficult because the port authority sharply curtails bus service after midnight. The concert had been scheduled to end at 11 p.m. but rain delayed it until 1 a.m. Two Negro., youths ..were arrested for malicious mischief.

WASHINGTON UPI—Chairman Carl Perkin* predicted today that the House Education and Labor Committee will tighten up federal control over local antipoverty programs in response to charges poverty workers have incited big city riots. Perkins, in an interview with United Press International, said the change would undoubtedly be one of several made in the Johnson administration’s antipoverty program. He predicted, however, that a GOP bid to abolish the Office of Economic Opportunity would fail. “OEO will not be dismantled and its major functions wdll remain intact,” Perkins said. Republican members of the committee met today to plan their drive to amend the administration bill. Rep. Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., said he thought many of the GOP members “will insist that we continue our OEO elimination proposal.” Perkins declined to spell out the changes his panel will make in the antipoverty program with the exception of giving the OEO greater control over local agencies. Local boards of trustees now have sole control over hiring, and firing of personnel and op- ! eration of local poverty programs. R. Sargent Shriver, director of the OEO, said there is "no truth” to charges antipoverty i workers were Involved in the ' big city violence and said the antipoverty program was being used as a “scapegoat.” But a number of congressmen were disturbed by conflicting testimony last week on whether OEO funds were used to run a |

"hate Whitey” school in Nashville, where police officials contended the OEO was subsidizing the school. Shriver categorically denied the charge. Six weeks of hearings on the administration’s $2.06 billion bill to continue the war on poverty for another year ended Aug. 1, but the committee is not expected to start voting on a bill before early September. A major factor in the delay has been the summer riots. One House Democratic leader said “emotion rather than reason” prevails as long as there are riots and the poverty program would be accused of "rewarding rioters” by continuing to pump money into areas which spawned the disorders.

In Britain 8f million letters are mailed each day. The northermost point i a the United States is Point Barrow, Alaska. The home of Thomas A. Edison in West Orange, N. J^ is a National Historic Sits.

The Rio miles long.

Grande is 1,885

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End search for missing plane ANDERSON UPI—The Civil I from Columbus, Ohio, to ChiAir Patrol ended its search for ' cago. a missing plane Sunday after : C.A.P. authorities said the the pilot and his two passengers ‘ flight plan called for a route landed safely at Midway Air- over Toledo, South Bend and into Midway airport. Some 170 persons and 19 aircraft were involved in the The plane had been reported j search which covered more than missing Saturday on a flight j 12,00 square miles.

port in Chicago late Sunday morning.

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AUCTION Wa Hava baan commisiionad to tall tha personal praparty of laland Torr (docoasacf) and will offor tamo at Public Auction at THE NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY At 10 A.M. On August 9th Sola includes: Two living room suites (one like now), upright piano and piano bench, coffee table, two platform rockers, smoking stand. Zenith TV, kneehele desk, 6 dining chairs, lamps, pictures, child's table A chair, rockers and acc. chairs, metal wardrobe, beds and bedding, feather bed, twe 12x12 rugs, 9x12 rag, threw rugs, sewing machine, kerosene heater, fleer fan, esc. fan, large pressure cooker, two nice dinette sots, Skel-gas range, twe refrigerators, 714 cu. ft. freeter, Maytag washer, base cabinet, small gas heater, elec, heater, Jardineres, set af Blue Willow ware dishes, ather dishes, utensils, elec, skillet, stone jars, teals and many ether items. ANTIQUES Twe wall telephones, sausage mill, four stand tables, twe wal. dressers with marble, child's dish set (very eld), comb, bookcase desk, coffee mill, butter meld, large Bibles, McGuffey's reader and speller, Putnam Ca. Historical Atlas 1B79, 7 issues Harpers Weekly 1EB2, ether old books, jewelry, castor set, three decks, flatirons, silk umbrella, ash drop-leaf table, berry set, two glass bread plates, zither, pictures and frames, love seat and matching chair, child's rocker, hi-chair, hobby horse, four plank bottom chairs, dining chair, tin door safe, walnut organ case, wicker table, iron kettles, trunk, Steven .22 rifle. Civil War Award, side-saddle, dell, round dining table and ether old items. Sal* Conducted By CLAPP'S AUCTION SERVICE Frazier 5 Clapp, Auctioneers Frazier ft Crump, Clerks Lunch wil be served by Big Walnut Baptist Church