The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 February 1968 — Page 3
Friday, February 9, 1968
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Faga 3
Fincastle News By Mrs. Maude Brothers, Correspondent
The soup supper which was sponsored by the Community Church Wednesday evening was well attended and thanks is extended to all who helped to make it a success. Jimmie Beams is confined to
Visits India
MOSCOW UPI -- The commander of the Soviet navy. Adm. Sergei Gorshkov, flew to New Delhi Friday for an official visit to India.
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the Winona Hospital in Indianapolis. Sunday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Baird and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Baird and children. Doug and Sara Beth, visited Mrs. Olive Baird and sons. Sunday evening. Mrs. Baird called on Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jeffries. Other visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jeffries. Mr. and Mrs. Werner Strelow were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Sessions. In the afternoon, they called on Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Shannon and daughters and reminded Gloria it was her birthday by presenting her with a birthday cake. Mrs. Kathleen Allen, who has been staying with Mrs. Wilhelmina Williams, returned to her home in Clinton Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Busenburg, of Indianapolis, spent the weekend with Mrs. Williams. We are glad to know Mrs. Williams is able to be back at work In her store after an absence of several weeks due to an injured knee. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Trzybylski, of Illinois, and her son, Richard Lee Newkirk, of Indianapolis, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Grider. Mrs. Olive Baird, accompanied by Mrs. Maudie Garrett, of Roachdale. called on Mrs. Dora Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Harve Oliver in New Market Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Boiler were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barnes in Terre Haute Sunday. Randall Wilson had the misfortune of falling Saturday and breaking his arm.
ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENTS—Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow J. Finchum, rural Cloverdale, today announced the engagement of their two daughters. Karen Jean (leftI recently became engaged to Todd Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Jones of Fillmore and Sharen Kay (right! just recently announced her engagement to Stanley Ryland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ryland, also of Fillmore. No date has been set for either wedding.
A Womans View
By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK UPI — The photographer took one look at the face of the girl and told her, “You stay that way and I can
use you.”
The photographer was London’s David Bailey. The girl was London’s Jean Shrimpton, with her long and straight ash blonde hair, the fair skin without makeup, the dreamy blue-
| click-click.” Now, she’s taken on a different assignment, a long term promotion for hair cosmetics for Yardley of London. Miss Shrimpton's career began “because I didn’t want to go to a university and I was fed up with asking father for money.” She is one of three
children.
Her first work was with
gray eyes, the leggy figure Bailey, who like “the Shrimp”
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“five feet nine or 10 inches . . . about 130 pounds”. The time: Seven years ago. “I was right out of the country,” says Jean Shrimpton, now 25. “Sort of scruffy and useless. But I hit at a time when the magazines were ready for something else. The stiff model type had had it. “You either had to be so far out of reach, like a Garbo, or els* someone people could Identify with. I was lucky on looks. Tm really very ordinary.” Well, “the Shrimp,” as this model has become known internationally, is being overly modest. Her features are quite nigh to perfection although j she faults her nose—“It sort of goes up in the air, but I can’t, worry about it.” “Flawless beauty would be dull, don’t you think?” she said. And who’s to argue with the | thinking behind the face of the girl who has become one of the most sought-after models in the highly-specialized business of photography for advertisements and editorial space. Miss Shrimpton commands what probably is the highest fee paid any model—120 an hour. The standard rate in New York for those facing cameras
is $60.
“I really raised the rate so I’d get fewer assignments; not have to work so hard,” she said. “Seven years of model-
now is highly successful. Then, when she came to the United States to do an assignment for British Vogue, she met Richard Avedon and her association with the man who has photographed most of the world's beauties
has been a long one also.
Castle Toppers Club hold February meeting
Religion in America
By LOUIS CASSELS An epitaph of the hippie movement has been written by a noted psychiatrist who had ample opportunity to observe it first hand. He is Dr. Graham B. Blaine Jr., chief of psychiatry. University Health Services, Harvard University. His report on “The Death of the Hippies” appears in the current issue of Academy Reporter, monthly journal of the Academy of Religion and Mental Health. His remarks deserv# a thoughtful hearing from lelig- ! ious folk who entertain the belief that hippiedom is a touching manifestation of Christian
love.
To Dr. Blaine, it is pure nonsense to depict “flower children” as modern saints w'ho have turned their backs on the crass materialism of American society to practice the precepts of
! Jesus.
It is equally absurd, he says, to believe that they have found happiness and serenity by j “dropping out of the rat race.” The truth about hippies, says this doctor who has treated many victims of LSD, is that they are self-indulgent and un-
happy people.
Their bizarre costumes and hairdos, and their flamboyant conduct, is a “facade” disguising “the misery and the desolation of the human beings behind it." But even a physician who sees through the disguise sometimes finds it difficult to sympathize with their "desperate loneliness,” he says, because hippies themselves are “contemptuous of our concern and prefer to wallow in their own emotional
physical squalor.
“Before the memory of this chaos.” startling group fades away entirely,” he says, “we should try Dr ' Graham suggests that in to learn something about w r hy ^ lie h'PP' e experiment, it came into existence and wdiat situation ethics should remessage, if any, trails in its exam me their assertion that wake.” “absolute standards deprive man
of desirable freedom.
ENJOY TRIP TO NASSAU—Mrs. F. K. Wue.tz and Barbara of 712 Terrace Lane photographed aboard the S.S. Ariadne at Pier 2. Miami . . . bon voyage time! The S.S. Ariadne was their floating luxury hotel for the complete trip . . . with dancing and entertainment en route . . . time in Nassau to enjoy the tropical way of life with swimming, sunbathing, duty-free shopping and nightclubbing ... with their hotel tied right to the dock to make
shortime easy.
Another lesson to be learned from the hippies, he says, is that injustices and social problems can't be solved by passing out flowers and talking about
“love.”
“Their attempts to ‘live by love alone’ led not to some glorious nirvana, but instead to bitterness, rivalry, and finally vio-
lence.
“Like the young adolescents living an unfettered existence by themselves on an island in ! William Golding’s classic novel, The Lord of the Flies,’ the hipand pies found also that a world without discipline led only to
The Castle Toppers Extension Club held their February meeting Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Frank Green.
He suggests that the clue may lie in an old anecdote about a man who awoke after death to find himself in a beautiful garden. where the climate was al-
The main difference between the short-lasting philosophy of the love-in generation and the long-lasting Christian religion,”
v ' ays P erfect - A servant w^as at j, e sa y Sj “j s th e presence in the The president, Mrs. William ha ‘ ld ^ ^swer every command latter of absolutes which pro-
and fulfill every desire. the structure that seems to After se\eial weeks, he was jj e essen tial for the existence of so bored that he went to the a relatively harmonious society.” head man and announced that
he’d much rather be in hell. The ...
head man replied: “And where COllapSGS do you think you are?” JOHANNESBURG UPI — An “Perhaps the young of this earth tremor precipitated an generation were driven to dis- underground collapse at the traction by the affluence of to- Buffelfontein mine near Klerkday's world and did indeed fash- sdorp Thursday, killing one ion a private hell for themselves miner and injuring 40 others, out of desperation,” say* Dr. Officials aid seven miners were Blaine. still trapped undei ground.
A. Wood, opened the meeting writh the thought of the month, followed with the flag salute and club creed. The song leader, Mrs. James Green, led the group in singing the song of the
month.
Roll call w r as taken with members giving a list of articles and books they had recently read. Since there were no January meetings the December secretary and treasurer reports were given and ap-
proved.
The health and safety leader gave note of the material she had received. The president read the new r s letter from the Extension office and cards were signed for the office files. The Club prayer was repeated
ing Is a long time. I’m a bit next and the meeting adjourned tired. Modeling means travel with the hostess serving re-
and nice money and new things freshments.
and interesting people. But The next meeting will be held there’s nothing much to sitting at the home of Mrs. James Sim-
there while a camera goes I merman.
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To try again WASHINGTON UPI — Despite a record of almost com-, plete failure in past efforts to persuade Congress to scale down a popular conservation subsidy program. President Johnson has decided to try again this year. The program involved, one of many federal conservation operations, is called simply the Ag-
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rieultural Conservation Program and Is widely known by farmers under its initials, ACP. In most recent years, Congress has voted $220 million annually for ACP “cost sharing” payments to farmers who carry out aproved conservation practices. The Johnson administration, in its recent budget proposals to Congress, called for cutting ACP payments for the 1969 crop year down to $100 million > reduction of $120 billion from the usual level. But the record of congressional reaction to similar proposals in the past is far from encouraging In administration planners. Records for the past decade show that three presidents asked for ACP cuts totaling $1,165 billion. The only reduction Congress voted in those 10 years was the $25 million retrenchment for 1968 approved last December.
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