The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 April 1968 — Page 11
Wednesday, April 3, 1968
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Page 11
NATIONAL GUARDSMEN PATROL PANAMA CITY Some mounted on horses, Panama National Guardsmen loyal to impeached President Marco A. Robles patrol the streets in Panama City after a night of rioting following the blocking of a rival trying a coup. Left bright careers to serve in Viet
By Anne Marie Ellsworth CLIO, Mich. (UPI)—'‘It was in their makeup, their nature. They wanted to feel they were doing something.” This was a Michigan father’s reasoning why his schoolteacher daughter and her medical missionary friend left promises of brilliant careers in the United States to serve in the jungles of Vietnam. To serve, to be captured by the Viet Cong, to spend 52 days
Breaks glasses BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)Harvard University Prof. Dr. George Wald was stumped when it came to delivering the opening lecture at the International Conference on Visual Science at Indiana University Tuesday. Wald, who won the Nobel Prize last year for his work on human vision, broke the frames of his glasses just before he was to deliver the lecture and could not see the slides he was projecting on a screen. The IU division of optometry quickly fixed the glasses so Wald could proceed with his talk.
in an Asian prison camp and— finally—to be released Monday. “And now her mother and I can sleep again,” said Paul Johnson, father of 24-year-old Sandra of Clio. Sandra, a lively brunette who graduated from the University of Michigan at the age of 19, was teaching English near Hue when she was captured. A friend, Dr. Marjorie Nelson, 28, of Kokomo, Ind., who had been visiting with her, also was captured. But for Dr. Nelson, the only daughter of a deeply religious Quaker couple who hailed from Bad Axe, Mich., freedom came just a little late. Her mother, a long-time victim of multiple sclerosis, died suddenly of pneumonia last week. “We heard that Marjorie was to be released just about an hour before her mother’s funeral,” said an aunt, Mrs. Victor Kain, of Filion, Mich., just north of Bad Axe. Dr. Nelson and Miss Johnson, reported as unharmed and in good health upon their release, were undergoing physical checkups near Saigon before their return to the United States, Johnson said. He estimated it would
ADMINISTRATRIX SALE I will sell at public auction the personal property of the Estate of Jewel G. Stringer, at the Coatesville Auction Barn, Coatesville, Ind. Saturday, April 6, 1968 at 10:30 a.m. Walnut bedroom suite, 3 half beds, odd bed, dresser, tables and chairs, 6 china cabinet bases, TV table, metal shelves, combination radios and record players, radios, televisions and record player, humidifier, old regulator clock, large mirror, 1 upright and 1 chest type freezer, refrigerators, iron skillets, 2 step ladders, electric saw, large popcorn popper, 2 new tarps, stove dolly, dishes, 3 pie cases. Lot of miscellaneous items. Riding lawn mower, New Holland baler, 1957 Chevy pickup truck, new tires on rear, 1955 Chevy van truck. Trucks will sell at 2:00 sharp.
Terms: CASH, made. Everything sells.
No property moved until settlement is
Estate will not be responsible in case of accidents. Parties having consignments in sale barn please remove before day of sale. Ross and Pickel, Auctioneers Barbara Osborne and Dorothy Stringer, Clerks Lunch will be served. LUCILLE STRINGER
Administratrix
be several days until they came home. “The Quakers are in Vietnam on a peace mission, and Marjorie believes in serving other people,” Mrs. Kain said. “I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if she went right back.” But Johnson was a bit more pessimistic about his daughter’s future. “I don’t know if I’d like her joing back, but we’ll have to et her do her own judging,” he said. —Morton and Mrs. Glen Clark, east of Greencastle, called on Mr. and Mrs. Clair Albin last Thursday, evening. Mr. and Mrs. David Thomas attended the wedding of Susan Pierson and William Flock last Saturday at Bowling Green, Kentucky. William is the grandson of Mrs. Thomas. Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Russell CPHaver were Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Bishop, Mrs. Harry Simpson and children, Steven and Debby of Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Irwin, and Mrs. Aileen Overstreet of Greencastle, Route 1. Mrs. Vern Sigler and Mrs. Ray Clodfelter were dinner guests of Mrs. Ira Hutcheson last Friday. Other guests were Mrs. Nelson Wood, Mrs. Frances Rector, Mrs. Fay Thomas, and Mrs.Raymond Wright. Dale Barker and Mike Anderson, students at Purdue, are enjoying spring vacation with their parents and families. Mrs. Velma Hobson of Rockville called at the Harold Barker home Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Don Jefferies and children were Friday evening visitors and helped celebrate Dad Barker’s birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Earley Jackson and children, Rex and Darlene, and Mrs. Elizabeth Balyiat of Michigan were house guests Friday night and Saturday of Mr. and Mrs. John Carney of Springfield, Kentucky. They spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Goode and Mrs. Mary Thomas, also of Springfield. They enjoyed a birthdaydinner Sunday in honor of Mr. Goode. Ray Jackson, and friend, Carolyn Inman spent the weekend with the Goodes. Callers last Friday of Mrs. Russell O’Haver were Mrs. A. J. Sadler, Miss Joyce Farrow and Mrs. Noel Nicholson. Mrs. W. S. Lawter returned to her home in Russellville last Friday after spending several days in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Nicholson. Mrs. Roscoe White spent the weekend with relatives in Rockville.
Fern news
Miss Sharon Smiley of Mt. Olive spent Sunday with Miss Patty Burks. Mrs. Gene Cook and Mrs. Wilbur Kendall and daughter, Lisa, of Greencastle spent Thursday with Mrs. James Cook and son, Paul. Mr. and Mrs. Tommy McAllister and family called on Mr. and Mrs. Larry McAllisier and son, Larry, Jr., Friday evening. Weekend callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Heber were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur White of Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Hayes of Knightsville, Mr. and Mrs. James Clark and son, Paul, Mrs. Nadene Burks and family and Mrs. Vivian Hutcheson and sons. Mrs. Roy Higgins of Greencastle spent Saturday cleaning their cottage at Fern. Robbie Burks spent Sunday with David Sullivan at Greencastle. Sunday callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joy Cummings were Mr. and Mrs. John Shook and family, and Mrs. Eva Rockhill of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Francis Nelson of Greencastle.
Easter Seal sponsors
INDIANAPOLIS Indiana University Football Coach John Pont, Senator and Mrs. Birch Bayh, Governor and Mrs. Roger D. Branigin, Roger Ward and Mario Andretti top a list of more than 125 prominent Americans from every walk of life and all parts of the nation who are 1968 sponsors of the Easter Seal Societies for Crippled Children and Adults, it was announced by Arthur W. Wilkie, president of the Indiana Easter Seal Societies. They are lending their support to the cause of nearly a quarter million handicapped persons (14, 986 in Indiana), most of them children, who are helped each year in Easter Seal treatment and rehabilitation centers. All outstanding national figures, the sponsors are drawn from such diversified fields as education, sports, politics, business, entertainment and medicine. They include such leaders as Senator Birch Bayh, Senator Everett Dirksen, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, General Mark W. Clark, Governor Roger D. Branigin, Governor Nelson Rockefeller, Governor George Romney and J. Edgar Hoover. The world of entertainment has contributed many personalities, including Lucille Ball, Julie Andrews, Leonard Bernstein, Art Linkletter, Dick Clark, Debbie Reynolds and Bob Newhart. Sports figures among Easter Seal sponsors include Jack Nicklaus, Mario Andretti, Roger Ward, Roy Campanella, Otto Graham, Gino Marchetti, Bobby Richardson, Fred Schaus, Ernie Banks, Arnold Palmer and John Pont. Leader dogs featured Lafayette, Ind. — Demonstrations by leader dogs—so-called “seeing eyes” for the blind— will be a feature of this year’s open house at Purdue University’s School of Veterinary Science and Medicine. “The dogs are being brought down from the Leader Dog School for the Blind at Rochester, Mich.,” said Donald Thrall, Indianapolis student chairman. A lecture on the dogs’ training and a demonstration of their skills will be held at 1:30 and 3:30 on Saturday, April20, during the open house. The students will welcome visitors from 12 noon until 5 p.m. Tours through the school, the only one in Indiana empowered to confer the Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree, will be self-conducted, Thrall said. Students will be available at all displays and exhibits to answer questions. The open house is an annual student activity sponsored by the student chapter of the American Veterinary Medical Association, to foster better relationships among students, veterinarians, and the public. Last year, more than 3,000 persons came from Indiana and Illinois to visit the Purdue veterinary medicine facilities, the largest group yet attracted to the affair.
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Leaders from medicine and rehabilitation include Morris Fishbein, M.D., Walter C. Alvarez, M.D., Henry B. Betts, M.D., Howard A. Rusk, M.D., and Herbert Koepp-Baker, Ph.D. Among outstanding women included among Easter Seal sponsors are Mrs. Birch Bayh, Mrs. Roger D. Branigin, Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Mrs. Morton B. (Abagail Van Buren) Phillips, Clare Booth Luce, Mrs. Charles (Lynda Bird Johnson) Robb and Mrs. Orville Freeman. Leaders in Education include Mason Gross, Ph. D., president, Rutgers University, Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., president, Notre Dame University, Dr. David D. Henry, president, University of Illinois, and Dr. Frank A. Rose, president, University of Alabama. Continued on Page 14
| Kitchen | 1 Korner I 1 I Do you wait until summer to have some good barbecue? I can’t wait until then, so you could see me out in the snow turning the steak or chicken. Barbecued Chicken Pour liquid shortening over pieces of frying chicken and sprinkle generously with paprika. Let stand for 30 min. When charcoal fire is ready for use, cover grill with heavy duty aluminum foil. Lay chicken on foil and cook for about 1 hour, turning as necessary. Do not baste during this period. Then remove foil and lay chicken directly on grill. Baste with barbecue sauce often for about 20 min. until chicken is crispy and brown. Barbecue Sauce 2 c. ketchup 1 t. Tabasco sauce 1/4 c. vinegar 1/4 c. light brown sugar ' 1/4 c. prepared mustard 1/2 c. vegetable oil Combine ingredients and blend well. This amount is enough for two or more chickens. Leftover may be kept in refrigerator for days. Happy Eating
Wardrobe Veteran HOLLYWOOD (UPD—Edith Head, who has won seven Oscars, will create the wardrobe for Shirley MacLaine in • Sweet Charity” — her 1,100th motion picture assignment.
NOTHING EXCEPT WAR A South Vietnamese bov mghti who has known nothing but war all his life, stares at a captured Commimist wer.pcr. cn display in a s*ve<“ in Saif on.
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