The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 August 1968 — Page 3
Thursday, August 22, 1968
The Daily Banner, Greencastie, Indiana
Page 3
PROGRESS REPORT
DPU announces appointment
Greencastie, Ind. (Spl)~ Dr. James A. Madison today was appointed head of the department of geology and geography at DePauw University. Announcemen of the appointment and Madison's promotion to the rank of associate professor was made by President William E. Kerstetter. Madison succeeds Dr. Robert Johnson who joined the faculty of Colorado State University. Madison has been a DePauw faculty member since 1954 when he completed two year’s assistantship in the University of North Carolina geology department. The 40-year-old geologist completed his undergraduate work at the U. of North Carolina, earned the M.S. there in 1955, and was granted the Ph. D. this summer by Washington University in St. Louis. In addition to his regular teaching duties at DePauw Dr. Madison has taught for nine sumActors trapped HOLLYWOOD (UPI)— Actors and crew of the American movie, "The Bridge at Remagen,” were trapped in Czechoslovakia Wednesday during the invasion by other Communist countries. The film stars actors Robert Vaughn, Ben Gazzara and George Segal.
mers in the University’s National Science Foundation institute.
Dr. James Madison
including this summer when the program was held under NSF and Armed Forces auspices in Munich, Germany. The native North Carolinian has taught in summer programs at the University of Illinois and at Colorado State University. During the course of his doctoral work he received fellowships from the Eli Lilly Improvement Fund and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. He is a member of the Society .of Sigma Xi and the National Association of Geology Teachers. At DePauw he serves on the Faculty Athletic Committee, the Student-Faculty Relations Committee and is a faculty adviser to the Student Court.
Vehicle inspection to be part of state fair
Indiana’s new vehicle inspection program will be a part of this year’s Indiana State Fair. Willard L. Walls, Administrator of the Department, invites all Hoosier fair goers to visit our exhibits on the Fairgrounds to familiarize themselves with the new vehicle inspection program that ges into effect January 1, 1961.
addition, he said, it saves the motorist money, and alerts vehicle owners to minor defects before they become major repair jobs. "Vehicle inspection makes a motorist more safety conscious,” Walls stated. Crime
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Information telling Indiana vehicle owners what the program consists of and what will be expected of the vehicle owner will be displayed at the Indiana State Police Building located on the east side of the Fairgrounds on the Main street and at the REMC exhibit on the northside of the Fairgrounds. Walls explained that in many states where vehicle inspection is in use it has been a big factor in reducing accidents caused by vehicle defects. In
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PUBLIC SERVICE INDIANA
control plan rests on legislature INDIANAPOLIS (UPI ) - Governor Branigin’s staff expects to file a required plan for crime control well before a Dec. 19 deadline set in federal legislation but the realization of the plan rests heavily with the 1969 legislature. David Allen, Munster, Branigin’s administration assistant in the law and order area and member of the Indiana Police Board, is working on the plan. He said the 1968 crime control law "is a positive influence in the areas of correction, law enforcement, juvenile delinquency prevention, and criminal justice.” Allen said that in preparing the Indiana crime control plan, he expects to “pull some ingredients” from recommendations being made to the 1969 legislature by legislative study committees and work being done by executive department agencies. However Allen warned that “the public should recognize law enforcement deserves more equitable consideration from those who have to set budget priority."
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Rights leader warns of new racial conflict
By STEVE GERSTEL National Convention. CHICAGO (UPI)—A southern “if representative governcivil rights leader warned of me nt is not a reality for blacks possible new racial conflict if as well as whites, we are on a Negroes lose their bid for a one-way street to a race war in bigger voice at the Democratic this country,” warned Dr. John v/X'X-X-X-X-X’X’X'X-XvX'X-X-X-X-X-X-X'X-X'X-X-t-X-X'X'X-XvXvJ’XvXvIvX'XvX':'; Cadou’s Column : X By EUGENE J. CADOU *
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI ) - Tired members of the Democratic national convention’s credentials committee Friday will begin consideration of a challenge to the seating of seven Indiana delegates. The element of fatigue may help the challenged delegates keep their seats because the committee has been sitting since Monday to consider delegate objections from 18 other states. Gov. Richard J. Hughes of New Jersey, committee chair, man, put Indiana last on the list late Friday afternoon. Bogle Denies Connection The presidential battle between Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Sen. Eugene J, McCarthy is the cause of the Pollution board issues order INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) —The Indiana Stream Pollution Control Board Tuesday ordered the Penn Central Railroad of Elkhart to install facilities to abate pollution of Crawford Ditch and the St. Joseph River. The board set Dec. 1 as deadline for submission of plans and next June 1 for completion of construction of waste treatment of or control facilities. The board also adopted a policy against the installation of home aeration - type sewage treatment plants which discharge to storm sewers, lakes water courses or roadside ditches. The board said it would approve such systems only where the effluent is disposed through the use of an absorption bed with no outlet. The board approved an agreement between the City of Madison and the Town of Hanover for treatment of sewage from the Highway 107 area at the Hanover sewage treatment plant. The City of Madison proposes to annex the area which lies between the two communities. The board approved final plans and specifications for waste treatment and control facilities or sewage works projects for the following: E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., East Chicago; Hurley Oil Co., Brighton; Inland Steel Co., East Chicago; Batesville; Colfax; Fort Wayne; Independence Hill Conservancy District in Lake County; Indianapolis Sanitary District; New Market; St. John Elementary School in Lake County; LaGrange; HardinMonroe, Inc., Monroe Reseryoir; Indiana Dunes State Park; "Park in the Woods” Mobile Home Park in Porter County; Turkey Run State Park; Westhaven Estates Mobile Home Park in Kosciusko County; Evansville Day School; American Oil Co., Truck Stop in Bartholomew County, and R & J Oil Refinery in Gibson County.
challenge which was filed by Mrs. Nancy Salmon, Bloomington; Sidney Berger, Evansville, and Richard O’Connor, Bloomington, of the “Indiana Credentials Committee,” composed chiefly of McCarthy backers. However, Dr. James Bogle, South Bend, head of the Indiana McCarthy organization and a convention delegate, has denied official connection with the maneuver. Indications are that all seven delegates threatened with loss of their seats are Humphrey supporters. They are state chairman Gordon St. Angelo, head of the registration section of the Humphrey national organization; Evansville Mayor Frank McDonald; Thomas Lemon, former mayor of Bloomington; James D. Williams, Corydon; Albert Reschar, Jeffersonville; Morgan M i e r s, Greensburg, and John Haley, Terre Haute. Mayor McDonald, and Mrs. Agnes Woolery, Bloomington, state vice-chairman, are credentials committee members. Strong Arm Tactics The challengers contend that by means of fast gaveling and strong arm tactics, McCarthy advocates were denied permission to address three congressional district caucuses which later elected national convention delegates suspected of being lined up for Humphrey. Indiana has 63 delegate votes at the convention. McCarthy will be lucky to garner 10 of them, according to present prospects. He was last in the Indiana Democratic presidential primary in which the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy finished first and Governor Branigin second. Branigin and Mrs. Dorothy Elmore, Crawfordsville, are serving on the resolutions committee. James Cunningham, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Jeanette Strong, Gary, are on the permanent organization commit, tee, and East Chicago Mayor John B. Nicosia, and Mrs. Margaret Williams, Richmond are on the rules and order of business committee. Unemployment claims down INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — A sizeable reduction in unemployment claims in Indiana was noted last week. Dwight D. Kelley, chief statistician for the Indiana Employment Security Division, said only 20,856 claims were filed last week, a 23 per cent decline from the preceding week’s total of 27,241. The corresponding week a year ago had 23,194 claims. Kelley said the decrease was spread across the state and was attributed to a number of callbacks or workers idled by vacations, model changes and inventory.
PRE LABOR DAY CLEARANCE NEW AND USED EVERYTHING MUST GO 6 H.P. TO 12 H.P. TRACTORS. READY AND RARIN' TO GO. DRIVE THEM AWAY. HUMPHREY’S Wheel Horse 106 W. Jacob OL 3-3019
Cashin, chairman of the National Democratic party of Alabama. Cashin’s group is trying to replace the regular Alabama delegation to the convention, which includes delegates pledged to the American Independent Party headed by former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. Cashin said the Democrats now have an opportunity to “lessen racial tensions” by busting regular delegations from Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and Texas just as they did Tuesday night with the Mississippi delegation. Square dance The Crosswalker Square Dance Club of Hillsdale will have a club dance Aug. 23 from 8 to 11 p.m. The dance will be at the North Plaza Shopping Center in Terre Haute. The caller will be Mel Cruse.
Members of five rival delegations, in a joint statement read by Georgia state Rep. Julian Bond, said they wanted to underscore “the similarity” of the four unsettled challenges and the Mississippi case. Several expressed concern that the credentials committee might use the Mississippi action as an excuse not to unseat any of the other regular southern delegations. In the Mississippi case, the convention’s credentials com-
mittee overwhelmingly refused to extend to that state’s nearly “lily white” delegation the shelter of the broad philosophical umbrella which traditionally has protected all wings of the party. The committee’s historic decision was announced by Gov. Richard J. Hughes, chairman of the credentials group, at a steamy post-midnight news conference after a long, exhausting session. It came as no surprise.
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