The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 September 1968 — Page 2

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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Monday, September 30, 1968

THE DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated "It Waves For AH" Business Phone: OL 3-5151 -OL 3-5152 Lu Mar Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and Holidays at 1221 South Bloomington St.. Greencastle, Indiana, 46135. Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle, Indiana, as second class mail matter under: Act of March 7, 1878 United Press International lease wire service: Member Inland Daily Press Association; Hoosier State Press Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters and pictures sent to The Daily Banner are sent at owner's risk, and The Daily Banner Repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. By carrier 50C per week, single copy IOC. Subscription prices of the Daily Banner Effective July 31. 1967-Put-nam County-1 year. S12.00-6 months. S7.00-3 months, S4.50 - Indiana other than Putnam County-1 year, S14.00-6 months, SB.00-3 months,' 55.00. Outside Indiana 1 year. SIB.00-6 months. $10.00-3 months, 57.00. All Mail Subscriptions payable in advance. Motor Routes S2.15 per one month.

TODAY’S EDITORIAL The Red Fox T^wESPITE the failure of coalitions with the Communis' ists, American doves persist in demanding that the South Vietnamese invite the Viet Cong into the Saigon government. Vice President Hubert Humphrey, although he has vacillated on the issue of a coalition government for South Vietnam, pointed out that giving the Communists any governmental posts is like letting a fox into the hen house. Pretty soon there aren’t any hens left. Doves go even* further than merely suggesting that the South Vietnamese put the Communists into their government, a government with which the Viet Cong have been at war since 1954. Sen. Eugene McCarthy and the Kennedyites want the United States to compel the South Vietnamese to accept a coalition government as the price for continued American support. In less polite terms, the doves want to blackmail the South Vietnamese into accepting the Red fox. The Citizens Committee for Peace with Freedom in Vietnam, an organization of prominent Americans including Gen. Eisenhower and two Democratic former secretaries of State, has spoken out against the dovish demand. The committee asserts that “under no circumstances should the United States exert pressure on South Vietnam to accept a coalition government. Just as we are opposed to Hanoi imposing a coalition government on South Vietnam by military force, so must we avoid having our own country help, by word or deed, in the achievement of Hanoi’s objective.” To force an ally to accept a coalition with the enemy would be the worst kind of imperialism, they contend, something American doves are supposed to oppose.

Extension

news

By JERRY WILLIAMS County Youth Agent

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The past several days I have been working very hard trying to get everything in order for the County 4-H Achievement Meeting. This will be held Saturday, Oct. 5, 7:30 p.m., at the Greencastle Junior High School Auditorium. We are having this on Saturday evening with hopes that the 4-H members who are in college might come to the meeting. Many of the top acheivement awards go to the older members who are in college. Also, there are many awards that go to the members who are in high school and junior high school. The meeting should be over in time for the ones who have dates to still go out after the meeting. All of the parents are invited to come also. I should say that anyone is welcome to come and give honor to the 4-H members that have won special recognition. The Putnam County 4-H’ers have done very well in their competition with members from other counties. As a matter of fact, I am looking forward to next year, because there are many members that are really working on their program. At the Achievement program, winners of the achievement medals and trophies will be announced. Also, announcements of the ones to fill out achievement record books will be made public. This is the one that I am looking forward to see the results of next summer. Roundup and State Junior Leader Conference Delegates will be named. The Junior Leaders will receive the completion pins. The State Fair exTrip to Japan INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — An exhibit demonstrating how to make computer components smaller by using concentrated sunlight in Rose Poly freshman Don Baker’s ticket to the 1969 Japan Science Awards Exhibit in Tokyo this January. The IS-year-old Indianapolis youth will represent the U.S. Army. Baker’s exhibit won fourth place among 400 entries at the 19th International Science Fair at Detroit last May, ensuring him the trip to Japan.

Forerunner of the vacuum bottle, the Dewar vessel, a dou-ble-walled glass tube with air in between for insulation, was originally developed for holding liquid air.

MR. BIG

—Gary mayor separate discussion groups at several campus living units. All major sessions will be conducted in Bowman Gymnasium and will be open at no charge to the general public. The Schedule Friday, October 11 10:00 a.m. Sidney Hook, recently retired head of the department of philosophy, New York University, “Law, Liberty and Progress in the Life of Mankind.” Friday, October 11 11:00a.m. Richard E. Hatcher, mayor, Gary, Indiana, “Law, Liberty and Progress in relation to Minorities, Poverty and the Cities.” Friday, October 11 7:30 p.m. Charles Malik, professor of philosophy, The American University, Beirut, Lebanon, and former president of the General Assembly of the United Nations,“Problems of World Peace.” Friday, October 11 8;30 p.m. Panel discussion; Sidney Hook, Richard Hatcher, Charles Malik, McGeorge Bundy. Saturday, October 12 10:00 a.m. McGeorge Bundy, president, the Ford Foundation, and former special White House Assistant to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, “How to Build a Greater America.”

The Fourteen Points was a statement of the war aims of the Allies made by President Woodrow Wilson on Jan. S. 1918.

WILLIAM F.

BUCKLEY, JR.’s ON THE RIGHT

X; X 1 & .V» g & hibitors will be given special recognition. Participants in other district, state, national, and international 4-H programs will be introduced. Sounds like it could be an interesting program. Come out and support the county 4-H program. The Junior Leaders had a busy day last Saturday at the fairgrounds. They served sandwiches and drinks to the Quarter Horse People at their state show, and also to the Indiana Duroc Breeders at their Sale. After that they took a hay ride. I think that they all had a good time after their long work session. Last Wednesday evening, my wife, Sandy, and son, Kevin, and I went to the Madison Twp. 4-H completion meeting out at No. 10 School House. This was sponsored by the Madison Twp. Farm Bureau. We enjoyed the pot-luck supper which was given for the members. The members were awarded a completion pin which indicates the number of years of 4-H work that they have completed. Then slides were shown of the 4-H activities of this past year. As a member of the State 4-H Advisory Committee, I attended the fall meeting of the group earlier this week. Some things that were discussed, which wiB probably become a fact, are of interest to some of the girls who aredress revue participants. Articles made in crafts which could be used in dress revue, will probably be allowed. Now, only articles made in clothing can be used in dress revue. An example of the new consideration would be girls that knit sweaters in crafts, could use this as part of their outfit along with what they made in clothing to model in dress revue. Sounds like a step in the right direction.

The national concern to Understand Chicago has caused all of the usual people to say all of the usual things, with here and there a surprise. Senator Goodell, who is the new Republican senator from New York State, had barely been invested when he began to criticize Spiro Agnew and, to be sure a little less directly, Richard Nixon, for adhering to old positions concerning the conspiracy. Anyone who suggests that the demonstrations in Chicago were Communistdominated or even Communistorganized is the object of general raillery, so much so that it is worthwhile laying down a few distinctions: 1) The Communist Party in the United States is not now so subservient to the Moscow line as once it was. However, it is rarely that the two depart, and even when the temptation is great, as when U.S. Communist officials denounced the rape of Czechoslovakia, it usually doesn’t take too long before the Party is back in the fold: where it is today, making sick excuses for Moscow’s invasion of Czechoslovakia. 2) The CPUSA is active in the United States but it is not in charge of radical activity. Not in the way that it was, for instance, in 1948, when it had full control of the Henry Wallace movement. As much is true elsewhere. The Communist Party in France was neither the instigator of the great May--June riots nor did it exercise final organizational control. It did, however, aftei a period of indecision, aid th( rioters, and seek out and in some areas achieve working control of their activity. 3) It is therefore not safe to assume that any particular demonstration you read about is a body--action caused by the assertion of the central Communist will. However, 4) call it what you like, there is an effort being made in this country and elsewhere to coordinate radical activities so as to produce a revolutionary situation. And when you view the event in Chicago,

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say, and the event before that at Columbia, and the workaday situation at Berkeley, you are justified in presuming that there is coordination behind the event, and the burden is on the demonstrators to demonstrate that their thing was spontaneous. Concerning which presumption, 5) it is relevant to take note of the meetings of the so-called Socialist Scholars at Rutgers University after Labor Day for their fourth annual conference, excellently covered by Mrs. Alice Widener in her bi-weekly, USA. The guest of honor was Ernest Mandel of Brussels, editor of a Socialist weekly, and a principal instigator of the riots in France. Mr. Mandel explained that the world was ripe for revolution, and that the key to its effectuation is a) the presentation of impossible standards - such as are “unacceptable to the capitalist system and cannot be granted within the capitalist system.” b) Organization organization organization; “Only because of a lack of revolutionary organization which at the decisive moment could counterpose new centralized workers’ power to existing capitalist power” did the revolution fail in France. Some of the literature distributed at the Rutgers meeting was backed by myriad scholars and organizations, by tough hardline revolutionists of the CPUSA type, and by playboy revolutionists of the Santa Barbara type. The old techniques of infiltration, subversion, intransigence were all invoked, generally and specifically - the whole bit. Also, the call for secrecy-“the smaller the number of persons who know about it the better your chance of success,” said one lecturer. By all means, don’t inform Senator Goodell what you’re up to. Is this a “Communist” movement? Ideologically, yes. Is it subservient to the Soviet Union? Yes and no. No in that the Soviet Union does not give it instrucContinued on Page 7

Wallace, Nixon, Humphrey will speak to editors, publishers

WASHINGTON (UPI)--Major addresses by the three leading presidential candidates highlight the completed program announced today for the 1968 United Press International editors and publishers conference here Oct. 7-8. Third party candidate George C. Wallace will speak at the opening session Monday morning, Oct. 7, and Republican nominee Richard M. Nixon will address the conference at two o’clock that afternoon. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, the Democratic candidate, will be the featured speaker Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 8. More than 350 newspaper executives and their wives will attend the two-day conference, at the Statler Hilton Hotel, which also will feature other national, ly known speakers and panel discussions on leading issues of the day. Elizabeth Carpenter, press secretary to Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, will address the closing banquet Tuesday evening, Oct. 8, following introduction by UPI White House reporter Merriman Smith. Other speakers include: Dr. George E. Mueller, associate administrator for Manned Space Flight, NASA; Dr. John P. Spiegel, director of the Lemberg Center for the Study of Violence, Brandeis University, and Dr. George Gallup, chairman of the American Institute of Public Opinion. There will be four working sessions during the two-day conference, with various author, ities participating in panel meetings that will examine, among other issues, a preelection look at post-election trends; political polltaking, and the changing trends in the design and content of newspapers and the reporting of news. Tom Boardman, editor of the Cleveland Press, will be chair, man of the first working session Monday morning, Oct. 7. It will begin at 10 o’clock with the address by Wallace. This will be followed by a pre-election briefing on the probable post-

election trends and policies by a panel of UPI’s top correspondents. They will be introduced by Julius Frandsen, UPI vice president and Washington manager, and will include Merriman Smith, White House; Stewart Hensley, Department of State; Donald May, Pentagon; Louis Cassels, racial matters; Frank Eleazer, Congress; Charlotte Moulton, Supreme Court, and John N. Fallon, foreign editor. Roger Tatarian, UPI vice president and editor, will serve as chairman of the second working session Monday after, noon. This will start at two o’clock with a speech by Nixon. Thereafter there will be a panel discussion of “The Good and Bad about Polltaking.” The panelists will include Gallup; Robert D. Coursen, research manager, The Minnesota Poll, Minneapolis Tribune; Jack B. Haskins, Snow Research Professor, Syracuse University, and John S. Coulson, vice president in charge of research, Leo Burnett Co. Inc., Chicago. Emmett Dedmon, vice president and editorial director, Newspaper Division, Field Enterprises Inc., will preside at the third working session Tuesday morning, Oct. 8. This will feature speeches by Mueller and Spiegel. The fourth working session Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 8, will be under the chairmanship of William B. Dickinson, managing editor, Philadelphia Bulletin. It will open at two o’clock with an address by Humphrey. A panel discussion will follow dealing Continued on Page 3

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By 1IKLOISK C KI SK

DEAR FOLKS: Why is it most married couples who have companion chairs always favor one even though they may he absolutely identical? I figured out the reason. One is usually nestled in a co/.y corner from which you can see the T. V. better. So naturally, this one gets niiieh more wear than the other. Take this hint from me and every few months switch those chairs! Do this and you’ll find one won’t wear out twice as fast! The same goes for lamp shades. If the sun hits one, it will deteriorate much faster. All you have to do is change the shades on these if possible. If not, switch lamps every so often. Ileloise ❖ * DEAR HELOISE: I had many salt and pepper shakers that required a cork in the bottom. Of course, some of the corks got lost and I didn't know where to buy replacements. Some shakers required such small ones. My husband came up with a suggestion. Why wouldn’t adhesive tape work?So I tried it. I put a piece of adhesive tape across the hole after I had filled the shaker and it held beautifully. Now we don’t have to worry about trying to buy corks anymore. Grace Wolf * * * DEAR HELOISE: This is how 1 use up nil of my favorite hand lotion, especially the larger sizes and those with plungers. When it seems to take hours to get a few drops out. or it won't squirt any more I add a little water and give it a few shakes. Thinning it with a little water doesn't hurt it a bit. Susan Quaker * * * DEAR HELOISE: • I have an electric frying pan with a high dome top. I make a ‘warming oven" by putting an oversize wire cake rack across the pan and setting the top on the lack. When I am frying hamburgers, I put the buns in this ’’oven.” There is just enough steam to make them warm and fresh (even when they come straight from the freezer). Maxine Rockoff * * * DEAR HELOISE: I have been embroidering a great deal recently and was in need of a small hoop. (I only have the larger ones.)

So I came up with an empty four-inch masking tape roll I put the small embroidery over the- roll, placed a wide rubber band around it and presto, a nice little hoop. It really worked fine for- my patterns. Birdie Ludwig DEAR HELOISE: Here's something my mother taught her children: "If you make a special Dip to borrow, make a special trip to pay it back.” Too many times we wait until we're going for other reasons. then forget to return the borrowed item. Mrs. L. Skinnei DEAR HELOISE: At a household sale I fell in love with an ornate old coat rack (really a hall tieei which I bought to use in the entry way of the house 1 someday hope to have. As I have no place for it now, I stuck it temporarily in a corner of our bedroom Several days later I found it had become drap’ed with my husband's shirts, belts, ties, etc., and that there was a noticeable lack of clothing piled over the chair and bed. Though ideally he should hang his clothes in the closet, he doesn't like to take the time to open ’the door and rummage for a hanger, belt hanger, tie rack, etc. 1 find this "halfway" method is preferable to his former habit and plan to have a coat rack in every bedroom as soon as I can find enough of them. Mrs. Michael Green

This column is written for you . . . the housewife and homemaker. If you have a hint or a problem write to Heloise in care of this newspaper.

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