The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 September 1967 — Page 4
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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Monday, September 18, 1967
Rain, fog, haze in many areas The Lighter Side
By United Press International i Slid haze blemished the SUIUiy Patches of heavy rain, fog i sunny and warm weather that
DOUBLE D TAVERN MENU TUESDAY
Meat Loaf or Wieners & Kraut
Mashed Potatoes
Corn f Bread, Butter
Coffee or Milk
90
covered most of the nation!
today.
Nearly six inches of rain drenched Russell, Kan., in a six-hour period before 1 a.m. this morning. Hail, one-qv rter inch in diameter, accompanied the rain. Aberdeen, S.D., received more than an inch of rain by early today while Pickstown, S.D., reported nearly an inch. Light rain fell over the northern Rockies and the ’’lais, the Middle Atlantic Coast and northern California and Oregon. Widely scattered thundershowers were developing over the mountains of the West and the Plains. A straight high pressure system over lower Michigan produced patchy fog and haze from the Midwest to New Eng-
land.
Summer remained unblem ished today, however, over | most of the Pacific Coast and from the Mississippi River to
the East Coast.
PERILOUS RESCUE HALFPENNY GREEN, England UPI—Michael Davies, 23, a novice making his second sky dive, fell victim to a “million to one chance” accident Sunday but lived to tell about it. Davies’ harness became entangled in a parachute release line attached to the plane from which he was diving. He dangled from the plane for five minutes while an instrustor climbed down the line, wrapped himself around Davies, and both men were cut free, falling to safety with the instructor’s parachute.
WASHINGTON UPI - Listed below are four nominations for the biggest labor story of the year so far. Check the one you regard as the most significant. The imprisonment of Teamster President James R. Hoffa. The railroad antistrike legislation. The threatened auto strike. The assault complaint filed against Joe Namath, a professional football quarterback, by a magazine sports editor. If you checked any except no. 4, you show an amazing lack of perception in the labor-manage-ment field. Incarceration of union leaders, railroad labor legislation and auto strikes are fairly old hat. But the assault case is unique. The thing that makes it so
THE BIG INCH!
The ruled box above Is a one-inch ad. It measures one column wide by one-inch deep. It costs advertisers about $1, depending on the rate. It looks kinda lonesome by itself. But look at it this way. What you get when you buy a one-inch ad in the Daily Banner is not just a single inch of space in the paper, but one inch multiplied by 6,200 copies daily. So you're really buying 6,200 inches, which at 168 inches a page would be some 36 pages of printed newsprint. That's a mighty big chunk of space for a cost of only $1. And that price includes delivery to the reader's front doorstep.
Just imagine the cost of reaching all those Daily Banner families by postcard. It would amount to more than $248.00 just for postage. But the Daily Banner does it for a measly $1 per insertion. So you can see that a little one-inch ad is really a pretty BIG inch when it's advertising space in The Daily Banner. And the figures show that it's the most effective and economical way possible to let people in Putnam County know that you have wares or a service that they could use. Call OL 3-5151 and let a Daily Banner represe»**^t : ve show you how a little BIG inch can wake up sales for you.
THE DAILY BANNER
Greencastle, Indiana
significant is the statement reputedly uttered by Namath during the alleged assault. He j was quoted as saying, “I don’t need any of you $100-a-week creeps to go around writing about me.” That, at least to my knowlledge, marks the first time a reporter’s salary has been used as a journalistic criterion by a prospective news source. It could inject an entirely new element into labor-management relations, which are sticky enough already. City Editor: ‘Jones, the new lieutenant governor is in town to make a speech. Go out and interview him.” Jones: “I can’t, boss. He won’t talk to any reporter making less than $200 a week.” Or a reporter assigned to cover a big fire might have trouble getting past the police lines. Reporter: “Here’s my press card. Let me through.” Cop: “Press card, hell! Let me see your salary check. This is a $190-a-week fire.” Or a Broadway producer refuses to let his plays be reviewed by any drama critic making less than $500 a week. Eventually a newspaperman might earn enough money to bring back a prize-winning story. But he would refuse to let it be set in type by a $3.50-an-hour linotype operator. If this trend becomes estabi lished in the newspaper business, it is bound to spread to other fields. An insurance ex- ( ecutive refuses to give dictation I to a $140-a-week stenographer. ! A hotel guest won’t let his bed be made up by a $1.40-an-hour , maid. You can readily imagine the chaos this would bring to collective bargaining. The only way to prevent it that I can see is for sports writers to stop publicizing professional football quarterbacks. Beginning with Joe Namath.
CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Record-Holder in Masters' Individual Championship Play)
FAMOUS South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH A J984 V AK J83 A 864
A Q
WEST EAST A3 A AQ 10 7 6 5 * 75 V A 10 9 5 3 2 AQJ AA 10 865 4» K 9 7 4 2 SOUTH A K2 V Q 109642 4 AK7 + J3 The bidding: South West North East 1 V Pass 3 V 3 A
4 V
HANDS
! That West's lead was a singleton was moreover confirmed by the card he led. the three. Kaplan was looking at the deuce in his own hand. East won the spade lead with the ace and Kaplan played the king on it without a tremor. He ; knew that if he played the deuce j East would return a spade for | West to ruff, and there would {then be no chance of making
the hand.
Naturally enough, East abandoned spades and returned the queen of diamonds. It simply didn’t occur to him that declarer would play the king on the ace if he also had the deuce. Kaplan took the diamond with the ace, drew two rounds of trumps, and then lost the eight
Opening letrt—three of spades. sP a des !o the ten. Back came
the jack of diamonds, won with
Some of the great plays in bridge are merely afterthoughts, but here is one that declarer solved right at the table, believe
it or not!
Declarer was Ben Kaplan of Bridgeton, N.J. Kaplan might well be one of our top players today were it not that he wastes so much time paying attention to his plumbing supply business. He was playing in a rubber bridge game many years ago and got to four hearts on the bidding shown. The vulnerability made it clear that East’s three spade bid was based on a six-
card suit.
the king. A trump to dummy was now followed by the nine of spades, East playing the queen as declarer ruffed. Another trump to dummy enabled South to discard a diamond on the established jack of spades. Declarer then conceded a club and made four hearts. His only losers were two
spades and a club.
Had Kaplan made the normal play of the spade deuce on the ace, the automatic low spade return would have resulted in hi* losing a spade, a ruff, a diamond and a club for down one.
(O 1987, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
nn on the
By Larry D. Hatfield WASHINGTON UPI — The popular belief that it Is Impractical to boost animal production to help meet world food deficits has been rejected b y three prominent scientists in the Agriculture Department Because protein is expected to become the foodstuff most severely limited in the future,
Indiana records 17 weekend traffic deaths
By United Prasi International Seventeen weekend traffic deaths sent Indiana’s 1967 fatality toll soaring to at least 1,042 compared with 1,098 a year ago. The toll included a pair of twofatality accidents. Sharon Reams, 14, Kokomo, was killed Sunday night on Indiana 19 southeast of Kokomo when she ran into the highway into the path of a car driven by Roland E. Beaty, 20, Tipton. Authorities said Sharon and four other youth tried to cross the road from a parked car to go to a church party. The other four got across safely. Lowell Hundley, 50, Atlanta, was killed Sunday when his car struck a utility pole along Indiana 28 west of Pi ton. Police said he apparently fell asleep at the wheel. Henry E. Quick, 20, New Albany, and Kenneth Messer, 21, New Albany, were killed Saturday night when their truck went out of control and crashed on a hill on U. S. 150 southeast ] of Paoli in Orange County. Judy Hettinger, 15, Logansport, died Saturday night of injuries suffered earlier in the day in a crash on Indiana 25 | southwest of Logansport which also killed her mother, Mrs. J Edith Hettinger, 42. Eric Ramer, 3, Peru, was i killed Sunday when he was struck by a car near his home. Jerry W. Smith, 22, Lapel, was killed Sunday in a cartruck collision on Indiana 63 northwest of Terre Haute. Wayne E. Ring, 26, Indianapolis, was killed Sunday in a car-truck collision in Plainfield. He was a passenger in the car. j Christ Karalious, 74, Michigan City, died Sunday from in-! juries suffered Saturday night when he was struck by a car i on U. S. 20 in front of the nursing home where he lived, j Linda Kron, 21, New Albany, i was killed Saturday night in a two-car accident in New Albany. A companion, Edward j Midkiff, 22, was injured critically. Pat Urias, 32, San Ang-elo. J Tex., a migrant worker, was killed Saturday in a car-tram crash in Tipton County. Richard Riffel, 11, South Bend, was killed Friday night j when struck on his bicycle by a car on a county road near South Bend. Lloyd A. Ostler, 33, Frankjfort, was killed Friday night
when thrown from a car in an accident on Indiana 39 north of Lebanon. Arston Miller, 2, Indianapolis, was killed Friday when struck by a car in Indianapolis. Doyce Smalling, 36, Huntington, was killed Friday night in a two-car accident on a Huntington County road. Dr. David Begg m, Bloomington, associate professor of education at Indiana University, was killed Saturday morning in a two-car collision on Indiana 37 southwest of Indianapolis.
44 killed in stadium riot ISTANBUL UPI — Fierce Turkish army troops today battled provincial street mobs enraged by a soccer stadium riot that killed 44 persons and wounded 600 others. The soldiers poured into the city of Sivas where an estimated 3,000 persons smashed and ransacked buildings belonging to citizens from Kayseri where the stadium brawling erupted Sunday. At Kayseri stadium, where about 26,000 men, women and children were watching a soccer match between the local team and Sivas’ squad, rival fans fought with knives, rocks, clubs and chains. Some victims were hurled from stadium grandstand balconies. Others fell beneath the trampling feet of panicky thousands stampeding for the gates. When news from Kayseri reached Sivas, crowds began breaking windows and then ripping into buildings owned by persons in the city 80 miles away.
many food experts feel that the feeding of protein-rich cereals and oilseeds to livestock to produce proteins for human consumption Is a wasteful practice and, as a result, livestock is competing directly for proteins needed for human beings. In the current issue of Agriculture Science Review, however, Drs. L. A. Moore, P. A. Putnam and N. D. Bayley reject that contention. They claim that planning by the United States to meet the needs of developing countries must provide for increased production of animal products. Moore is head of nutrition investigations for the dairy cattle research branch of the Agriculture Research Service. Putnam Is an animal nutrition specialist and Bayley is an expert in animal husbandry research. In their article the researchers said: “Although the emphasis on cereal and oilseed proteins has some basis, relegating animal agriculture to a passive contribution to world food deficit indicates a failure to appreciate the full impact of feed Inputs into livestock production.” They said that because livestock use forages and other feeds inedible to man, the use of limited amounts of cereals as livestock feeds “can enhance the efficiency of producing proteins for humans In terms of total food resource utilization.” They also warned that considering world food deficits solely in terms of amounts of protein or calories “may result in answers which will make only the less desired diets available to the ‘have-nots’ and may aggravate the serious sociological problems of the world rather than reduce them.” The scientists said the heavy emphasis on grain production to head off world food shortages has resulted In part because major studies on present and potential food production are based on grain yields, which are relatively easy to predict, but ignore livestock production, for which figures in many areas are unavailable.
RHODESIAN WARNING LUSAKA, Zambia UPI — President Kenneth K a u n d a warned Rhodesia Sunday against tempering with his country’s electrical supplies from the giant Kariba dam on the Rhodesia-Zambia border. He said he would expect Britain to intervene if Rhodesia tried to do
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