The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 February 1968 — Page 3

Friday, February 23, 1968

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Page 3

4-H News

The Busy Lassies 4-H Club of Jones School met on Feb. 21st

after school.

Mrs. Jackson hostess

to Reading Club

The Federated Reading Club met Wednesday, February 21st at 1:30 p.m. at the home of

The Lighter Side

Sen. Hart has opposition on home front

WASHINGTON UPI—Home

By DICK WEST | “I think it win strengthen is just another political battleWASHINGTON UPI — The their ability to stand up under ground these days for Sen.

Officers were elected as fol- Mrs. Paul Jackson, with seven Washington Redskins, being a pressure.” Philip A. Hart, lows: President. Kim Richard- members present. The presi- professional football team of In the next game, the Colts To the Michigan Democrats son- Vice President Jackie Al- dent, Miss Carrie Pierce, an- sorts, have no connection with penetrate the Redskin back- announced support of President son, vice esu , . the war in Vietnam. field, inflicting heavy losses on Johnsons unannounced candibright; Secretary. Allison Albm; nounced tha e comen ion o ^ we Redskin fans p ro ba- Washington quarterback Sonny dacy, two voices of his nearest Treasurer. Jane Torr; News Re- the Putnam County Federation ^ ^ ^ & better p 0sition than Jurgensen. and dearest respond in counterporter, Susan Frazier; Health of Clubs will be held April 9th mogt Americans to understand “Coach, we had been led to point: “Dump Johnson!”

what is going on over there, believe the Redskin baekfield Both wife Jane and 20-year-

was a secure area. Does this old daughter, Ann, are working

When the United States first signify a breakdown In pass for Minnesota Sen. Eugene J.

In connection with the Com- began bombing North Vietnam, protection ” McCarthy, so far the only munity Improvement project, it foreign journalists in Hanoi re- contrary it mav have Dem ° Crat t ° j ad " li J he “ S f eek * was announced that the Club ported that the air attacks had , . f , contrary it n the Presidential nomination.

was announced inat F ^ , left our linemen and pass block- tsj-,. th „.

is giving to the Greencastle - strengthened that country’s Nnf nnK thnt Ann has

Putnam County Library a war effort.

subscription to' the Indiana Many Americans were du- Conditioned as we are to Ann. blonde, petite and mini Clubwoman. Mention was made bious about that. If the North finding strength through adver- skirt ed.

of the Music Contest for high school students to be held Sa-

turday, February 24th at the tically building antiaircraft deDePauw University School of fenses M Us j Ci Then last week, after the

Viet Cong attacks on South Vietnamese cities, presidential assistant Walt W. Rostow re-

taliated.

He said the attacks “may

charge have left the South Vietnamese

and Safety, Patty Burks: Song at the Groveland Presbyterian Leader, Diane Oney and Myra Church. Reservations should be Brown; Recreation Leaders, made with Mrs. Elmer Seller.

Deann DeBore and Vanessa Kemp; Program Committee, Marcia Wilson and Melissa Cooper. A program committee was appointed with Jackie Al-

bright as Chairman.

The next meeting will be March 13th after school. We decided on 10 cents for dues.

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Following the business meeting, the hostess served delicious refreshments of ice cream,

brownies and coffee.

The program was

ers stronger than before.

Conditioned as we are to r __

is director of the

Vietnamese found the bombing sit >’' il ls easv for us Redskin Washington Volunteers for Mcbeneficial, why were they fran- fans to see how the bombin e Carthy. She numbers her broth-

North Vietnam may have er among 500 supporters who strengthened the North Vietna- are pitching in to help, mese and how the attacks In Mrs. Jane Hart is equally and South Vietnam may have openly opposed to her husstrengthened the South Vietna- band’s views. Substituting for mese. him recently for a speech beOne thing troubles me, how- fore a women’s group, she ever. It has been about 15 acknowiedged their differences years since the Redskin had a —“bedfellows make strange

tions in separate interviews— Ann in the 11-room apartment wiiere the local McCarthy volunteers have established their headquarters, complete with an LBJ picture for a dartboard: her parents over coffee in their home nearby. Hart argued that a “dump Johnson” move would guarantee the election of a Republican president in November. “My feeling is that Johnson is the least satisfactory person available to the presidency, of anyone in the world.” Ann retorted over her shoulder as she helped tape a McCarthy poster to the w^all. “I see him as ruining our country, destroying the nation and the Democratic party, by involving us in Vietnam. I see the Republicans as not much better, but less dangerous.” President Johnson is an honorable man and wants an end to the war in Vietnam. Hart said, but the consequences in

the balance of power preclude immediate abandonment of the U.S. presence. “If wise old heads can't find the a n s w- e r, it’s time to change.” Mrs. Hart countered. “We haven't made the first step away.” She disputed her husband's assertion that the United States has shown restraint in prosecuting the war: "Continued escalation isn’t restraint. We re in the process

of wiping out the whole population of Vietnam.” Hart feels that Jane and Ann. and those who share their views, can't see the woods for the trees. Vietnam will be "a footnote or a cruel chapter in history” before this nation's domestic problems are solved, and the Democratic party as now personfied by Johnson has proven its superiority over the GOP in coping with the latter, he said.

MOOSE LODGE DANCE SATURDAY, FEB. 24 9:30 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. Music By Bill Grimes Band Members Only

of Mrs. Elmer Seller, who gave Army and government Institu- "dnning season. Therefore, I am politics then presented her

an interesting review of Melis-i tions stronger than before.” sa Mather’s book, “One Summer, Again, many Americans were

In Between.” This story tells of a young girl from a Negro college in the South, who spent a summer as the employee of a white family in Vermont, and of her adjustment to this new

environment.

The next meeting of the Club will be held March 20th, with Mrs. Nettie Utt.

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dubious, incuding Chairman J. W. Fulbright of Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who called Rostow’s statement “fan-

tastic.”

To us Redskin fans, however, both interpretations made sense. They sounded a great deal like a typical post-game analysis. “Coach, the Baltimore Colts gave your team a terrific bombing. Johnny Unitas threw touchdown passes of 84, 76 and

69 yards. How will this affect bert be ^ rs * bia

your defensive secondary?”

proposing what I call the Red- views,

skin peace plan for Vietnam. She also has joined Women We stop bombing the Com- for Peace demonstrations in munists, see. and it makes them front of the White House, so weak they are forced to The senator and his distaff negotiate. dissenters argued their eonvic-

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Wall Street Chatter NEW YORK UPI—Wright Investors’ Service feels the stock market is beginning to reverse its 1967 trend and that those who choose quality or value stocks over the “over-priced” speculation issues will be best rewarded In the 1968 market. The company predicts that the “bottom” for this year’s market should not be too far above or below the 800 mark on the Dow Jones Industrial average. It points out that a market bottom is a good buying opportuni-

NEW YORK UPI—A memo pad on the desk of Muriel Sie-

reminder:

When I’m right, no one remembers. When I'm wrong, no

one forgets.”

The motto spells out the practical thinking of this diminutive green-eyed blonde, who's a new powerhouse in the financial world. Miss Siebert, now 38. left her native Cleveland “because I'd never been away from home” and 13 lucky years later became the first woman ever to hold a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. The 176-year-old exchange has 1,366 seats and to purchase one you have a thorough screening by its board of gov er-

nors.

“I think they put detectives on me; you should have seen the dossier,” Miss Siebert said, after she’d written a check for

ty for investors and recommends 0()0 of the seat) plus accumulating some cash ^e- 1 a $7 ’ 515 initiation fee

the

some cash re

serves during intermittent ral-

lies.

Goodbody & Co. foresees a

“A little nervous” was

way she summed up her reaction to writing a check for that amount, which is a high figure

narrowly moving market on the ^ t ^ . ' T . * . for a seat but is not a record

near term. It feels any major

How did she finance

that

by

' buildup in south east Asia prob- ^ . ? “By bank and

and other stringent economic borrow, she laughed,

controls, putting more pressure But the P eo P le a e ® x tj on stock prices. At the same change have been jus gran time, the company says, it sbe saicJ tbe otber as ue .seems that the new communist talked in her small, temporarv offensive can be contained with- office. She will move to peiout major escalation and that nianent quaiters as soon as business and economic news is space opens in one of the skvalso favorable, thus creating in- scraper buildings in the finan-

decision and a narrowly moving ci a l center.

list “I don’t think there ever was Newton D. Zinder of E. F. any anti-woman feeling.” she Hutton & Co. says now that the said. “I’ve had a good batting Dow Jones Industrial average average.” She had been a parthas broken out into the upside, ner in three other firms before the next “overhead supply in setting up in her own business, the 855-865 area” seems to b® But her floor transactions will a feasible target. be handled through Stern,

a large and experienced clerical staff which any exchange member must have. Apparently her plans not to trade on the floor set some of the admissions committee mor# at ease. The floor has no women's rest room. She aaid the standing comment before her admission was, “She will pay $445,000 for a seat and well have to spend $500,000 to install her a john.” Miss Siebert, daughter of a Cleveland dentist now deceased, studied business and economics at Western Reserve University. She was just a few credits short of a degree when she quit to take an accounting job In her home town. But when she decided to see more of the world, she came to New York and applied for a job at the United Nations. She didn’t get

It.

That was lucky, wasn’t it?" she recalled. In 1954, Miss Stebert went to work in Wall Street for the firm of Bache St Co., as a research trainee at $65 a week. The climb upward in the competitive world of big money has been steady. She credits “some luck and a lot of hard work” for her success.

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Hut collapses NEW DELHI UPI —Twentyfive persons climbed atop a mud-roofed hut to watch a folk dancing exhibition in the village of Munirka seven miles from here. The roof collapsed, killing a woman and a dozen children and Injuring the other 12 persons.

Bache finished ATHENS UPI —Weather has further damaged the grounded U.S. destroyer Bache and she canot be refloated, the U.S. Navy said today. A spokesman said the Navy had hoped to take the ship from the Isle of Rhodes to a drydock to be dismantled but the dismantling now will have to be done where the Bache lies grounded.

Spock unafraid MOSCOW UPI —The Soviet news agency Tass reported that Dr. Benjamin Spock, the American baby doctor, wrote a letter to a group of Soviet scientists telling them he was “not discouraged or intimidated” by his Indictment for antidraft activities.

DR. J. F. CONRAD OPTOMETRIST 801 E. Washington St.

HERE'S A LINE ON A BARGAIN

You’re using more electricity all the time ana paying less per kilowatt hour.. . Less than five years ago — or ten — or ever before. In these price-spiraling years that’s a line on a bargain. And a bargain on a line!

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