The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 31 January 1968 — Page 8

Pag* 8

Tha Daily Banner Draaneaafla, Vmffana

Wednesday, January 3T, 1968

Foreign News Commentary

By PHIL NEWSOM ■ prevention upon cool heads In

Americans in the last few the White House, the Pentagon

days have seen sobering and the State Department,

evidence of how widely spread Others Involve less the 1mtheir military forces are around mediate threat of war but lithe world and some of the lustrate rather the enormous enormous risks Involved. responsibility the United States

Some have involved the ac- has assumed in tual threat of war or the spread global policeman

of war. gressive Communism, and the In these events the American onus that can be attached to peopl* must pin their hopes for. such a task even among its

friends In a matter of hours, half way around the world from each other, events Illustrative of both occurred.

In the one. North Koreans

Cascade

School News By JANET WHDMAN 1 cash payment* and writing School Correspondent checks. At present they are Cascade's Marching Cadets working on filing income tax

performed at the ball game on

Communist world remains split over tribal feuds 1,000 years old

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forms, which is quite appropri-

its role as seized a U.S. naval Intelligence Friday night, presenting a satir- a ^ e at ^ 1S VMr ' against ag- vessel operating in international ical salute to all members of the The Drama Club is making waters 25 miles at sea and insect kingdom, with a medley; plans for the spring musical, forced it into a North Korean entitled, “Don't Bug Me.” Their Brigadoon. which will be preport along with Its crew of 81 specialty for the evening was a sented on April 15, with mem-

officers and men and 2 civilians, “spider creation” with seven hers of the band and chorus. In the second incident of re- realistic moving legs. The pom- The Band Solo and Ensemble

cent days, a U.S. B52 firing P on g'ris performed to a tune contest was held on Saturday at the Arctic circle route as part entitled. “Blue Tail Fly.” Two Greencastle with several stuof an air alert crashed off colorful antennae each wers* dents from Cascade taking part. Greenland with four hydrogen worn by the six twirlers as they The Solo and Ensemble Contest bombs aboard. saluted the “Glowworm.” Other ^ or ^ocal will be held on Feb. S,

The risk was not that the tune s played by the band mem- at Greencastle for the members bombs, still undiscovered at this hers, under the direction of Ken- at Cascade.

neth Jones, were “The Worms Becky Ellett. sophomore, is Crawl In” and one dedicated to Sunshine Girl of the month, the cockroach, “La Cucaracha.” Girls in Junior and The Senior class members! TTome Ec. class will visit the

Home Show Feb. 6.

The Cascade Cadets joumey-

The Communist world of Eastern Europe not only is not the monolithic structure it once was. it remains split by tribal feuds going back more than

1.000 years.

The latest of these to erupt involved harsh words between

Federal budget gets several cuts

interpret as a renewal of Bulgarian claims to Macedonia. The Bulgarian argument 1* that the Macedonians are really Bulgarians and their language only a dialect of Bulgarian. The dispute goes back to the two Balkan wars of 1911 and 1912 and World War I. Mace-

writing, w T ould explode or spread their readly radioactive cargo through the atmosphere, but lav rather in the embarass-

ment ‘it caused to the Danish have ordered their announcegovernment and its effect upon ment s and memory books. There

are just 15 weeks of school left for the seniors. The senior class members have received dark

ed to Turkey Run and defeated

them by a score of 7S-68.

the Danish people.

An agreement between the Danes and the United States

forbids U.S. warplanes from green sweat shirts, with Snoopy. HOLDS HER OWN

firing over Danish territory wearing the mortar board hat. with nuclear bombs. with the initials. T.G.^ .S. A third incident forced the 'Thank goodness were seniors! United States to deliver an em- in white letters, and ’68.

harassing apology to Cambodia. This grew from U.S.-South Vietnamese pursuit of the Viet Cong into Cambodia “in the heat of battle”

The past six weeks the Bookkeeping class has worked on practice sets giving students the opportunity to be a bookkeeper for the Spencer Athletics Goods, making record cash receipts.

ALBRIGHTON. England UPI -The boys won’t be picking on Gillian Horder. She’s a young judo expert, trained by her father, RAF judo instructor

Sergeant Eric Horder.

Yugoslavia and Bulgaria over the issue of Macedonia and to whom it rightfully belongs. Macedonia gave the world Alexander the Great, conqueror of most of the known world of his time. It has been held variously by the Greeks, the Romans, the Ottoman Turks and

in modem times, briefly by the donia then was part of th* Bulgarians and dirided among kingdom of Serbia, the nucleus Bulgaria. Yugoslavia, Greece around which Yugoslavia wa* and Albania. formed after World War I. Greek Macedonia, was the After the issue lay dormant scene of bitter fighting against for a time. Bulgarian newspaCommunist guerrillas in the pers began reviving it two

federal government s budget Greek civil war of 1947-49 and months ago on the occasion of cutting this j ear vail mean that abduction of some 23.000 the 90th anniversary of Bulfarmers get less federal help Greek children to Communist garia's liberation from th* Senior for engaging in land-sating con- coun t r ies nearby. Turks. servation practices. Today, Macedonia is the The reference was to tha The Agriculture Department nairie given to one of Yugoslav- peace treaty of that time which had intended to pay $220 mil- j a s si> . republics. gave Bulgaria what is now lion in consent ation subsidies to This week. Miso Pavicevic. Macedonia and parts of Serbia, farmers during 1968. But. due Yugoslav acting foreign minis- Greece and Albania, to the government-wide budget ter ca u e d i n the Bulgarian am-! The agreement collapsed afeuts ordered by President John- bassador. reportedly to protest ter three months and the Ber-

a mounting Bulgarian press lin Congress of 1878 gave campaign which the Yugolavs, Macedonia to Serbia.

WASHINGTON UPI

-The

son and Congress, only $195.5

will be available.

Because of the $24.5 million cutback in agriculture conservation payments, department officials estimate that federal money will be available for In

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Judges at the Woverhampton tensive conservation practices judo championships said her on only about 45 million acres judo was up to “junior mon instead of the 50.7 million acres one” standard but they couldn’t originally projected, give her a rating—she's only This means about an 11 per tour years old. cent cutback in the allocations — made to each state under the

conservation cost-sharing program. The cutback will be prorated among the states on the same basis present federal

funds are allocated

Laurence H. Manwaring. an official of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service charged with overseeing the conservation program, said it is too early to tell how the spending cut will affect the number of participants In the

program.

Last year, and in previous years, about one million farmers participated in the costsharing plan.

SIGN THREE

NEW YORK UPI -Outfielder Tommie Agee, pitcher Don Shaw and infielder Joe Moock agreed to terms Thursday with the New York Mets for the

1968 season.

Agee, acquired from the Chicago White Sox in a trade for Tommy Davis, batted .235 in 1967. He hit 14 homers and drove in 52 runs. Shaw posted a 4-5 record with the Mets before entering the Army Aug. 14 and Moock hit .225 in 13 games for

New York.

%\ If

Are doctors becoming more specialized? WASHINGTON UPI — The finding donors. The problem medical profession, as you well would be finding takers,

know if you have had a hangnail Periodically, the Red Cross

treated recently, has been becoming increasingly specialized. My own doctor, for instance, is a specialist’s specalist. That is, he specializes in referring his patients to other specialists. At the moment, attention here is centered on doctors who specialize in treating obesity. At Senate subcommittee hearings, complaints were made that some of these specialists rely too heavily on reducing pills. The general tenor of the testimony was that the pills are not as effective at taking off poundage as they are at reducing the bank account. This does not mean, however, that specialization is undesira-

ble.

Without heart specialists, the surgical techniques that now make heart transplants possible couldn’t have been developed. By the same token, we may hope that on some future day the obesity specialists will be able to perform fat transplants. Did you ever stop and ask yourself what happens to all the fat that overweight persons are losing through pills, exercises, diets and so forth? Jim Moran- the famous press agent, has a theory that this fat is floating round in the atmosphere. He fears that eventually it will start accumulating into fat clouds and that ultimately it will start dropping back to earth in the form of fat fallout. This. I hardly need point out. would be a disaster of the first magnitude. We are already having enough trouble with smog, which is a mixture of smoke and fog. Imagine what air pollution would be like if smoke mixed with fat to create smat. Such a crisis would be avoided through fat transplants. Rather than give an overweight patient pills or something to help him reduce, the obesty specialist would transfer the surplus fat to another person who is underweight. Once the technique is perfected. I enrision the establishment of Red Cross fat banks. There the fat would be typed: type “m” or type “b”, dependent on whether it was milk fat or beer

fat.

Thera would be no problem

would have to make urgent public appeals for skinny people

to relieve the overage.

SEE TH P

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