The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 October 1968 — Page 3
I
Thursday, October 3. 1968
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Page 3
| Personal and Local
Band Fillmore Band Parents Smorgasbord Saturday Oct. 19 at 6 o’clock at the Fillmore Gym. Eat your fill and pay what you will, Junior and Senior bands will play. Reading Tuesday October 8 at 2:30 p.m. the Tuesday Reading Circle will meet with Mrs. James G. Hughes, Mrs. C.L. Bieber has charge of the program. Goodwill The Goodwill Industry Truck will come to Greencastle Tuesday Oct. 8. Will donors please notify OL3-6587 by 6 o’clock Monday Oct. 7. Visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Johnson lef*. Tuesday for their home in Cleveland Ohio, after having visited with Mr. Johnson’s sisters, Mrs. Lucy Washbon, Mrs. Raymond T. Erbe. Ontario Mr. George Johnson is here from Ontario Cal. He is also visiting Mrs. Washbon and Mrs. Erbe. F. and A.M. Called Meeting Temple Lodge No. 47 F. and A.M. Saturday, Oct. 5 at 7:00 p.m. Work inM.M. Degree. Earl Poynter W.M. Monday circle The Monday Club will meet at the Fairway, Oct. 7 for a 12:45 luncheon. Members will go to Mrs. May Robbin’s home for a program given by Flair DrapH eries.
Kridler Jim Kridler has completed his basic training at Lackland Air Force Base at San Antonio, Texas and is now at Keesler Air Force Base at Biloxi, Miss. His address is . . .Amn. Kridler, James W. AF 68037603 3382 Sq. Cmr. 4 Box 18793 Keesler AFB, Miss. 39534 Lodge The Bainbridge Lodge No. 75, F. & A.M. will meet tonight. —Square pegs patios and bedroom wing, making a compact plan and low square footage. The bedroom wing has two bedrooms and two baths. The main bedroom balcony forms the roof of the carport cantilevers and ends in a point, like the prow of a vessel. In the living room, where there is no through traffic, even the lamps and endtable are based on the triangle. Only the rust-wool-upholstered swivel rockers were commercially manufactured. The sofa is built in, and covered with Chinese red nylon. Above it are bookshelves and lighting soffit. French doors open on the main balcony. Hickman said the home costs around $100,000. No! He is not selling. His triangular motif is to be used as Hickman’s selling point as a general contractor. And no he is not married.
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DAYS TILL UNITED FUND
nies; Ruth Pell, secretary; Lois Boswell, monitor; Rose Buis, historian; Judy Albin, guard; andJane Long, treasurer. The in-
stallation was Oct. 1.
— The BANNER Photo, Shaun Higgins.
OFFICERS-New officers have been installed by Kappa Sigma Phi sorority. The new officers are (left to right) Donna Stanley, vice-president; Mary Ann Saathoff, president; Donna Tirsway, mistress of ceremo-
■X;
Paul Rossok named
X;
new club president
s
The Boys Club started by “Bo” Lear was well attended by a total of 33 boys, Monday evening at the American Legion home. Eleven new boys were registered. There was an election of officers. Paul Rossok was elected President. Scott Buck was elected 1st Vice and Tim Lear 2nd Vice Pres. “Bo” Lear appointed Mrs. Lloyd Pulliam as secretary. Also a “Paral” board was appointed by the President. It included Gary Patterson, Terry Wieckart, Keith Pulliam and Stuart Levine. Lear and Wood discussed fur-
ther plans for the boys since they have already visited the County Jail, Fire department and Police station. Each boy had the pleasure of being finger printed by Capt. Bill Mastin. The Clubs next meeting will be Thursday Oct. 10 with James Smith of the Conservation Club showing films and having discussions with the boys. Any boy, age eight to 15 years, is welcome to join. Meetings are held every two weeks on Thursday from 6:30 to 8 at the Legion home.
Receives promotion Spl 4 Ronald Robbins, son of Mr. and Mrs. William O. Robbins, Roachdale, received a promotion last week from Pfc. to Specialist, fourth class. He is stationed in Vietnam and is to be home in February. He has two daughters in Roachdale. —Art league open to the public from January 8 to January 15. Sunday, January 12, will be marked with a tea and the presenUtion of awards. Items should be into the Center by January 6. There will be no meetings in February and April. Announcements will be made at a later date pertaining to meeting in March and May.
Bible Thought
And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.-Mathew 16:16. This is one question that we cannot bypass - Who is Christ? Have you made your declaration?
County Hospital
Wednesday Dismissals Hattie DeSpain, Greencastle Mrs. Michael Paul and girl, Greencastle. Wilma Coffey, Ladoga Helen Kloor, Greencastle Robert Reckel, Danville Mrs. Elmer Wells and boy, Greencastle. Lori Burns, Greencastle Perry Burns, Greencastle Vera Brown, Cloverdale Lantus Montgomery, Quincy Carry Pierce, Greencastle Janet Barr, Greencastle —Rebel House Committee on UnAmerican Activities. Rubin tried hard to appear revolting. I’ll give him credit for that. Real Trend-Setter He was shoeless and shirtless. He wore neck, wrist and ankle beads, and face and body paint. He had an African hairdo upon which was perched a beret. In short, he was setting a new fashion trend. I’ll lay odds that within three months you’ll see stockbrokers similarly costurned. At least after office hours. Young revolutionaries must find this sort of thing terribly discouraging. Write a protest song on Monday morning and by Saturday evening it’s being played on the Lawrence Welk show. With bubbles yet. There is, however, still one way to flaunt convention, buck the tide and stand out from the crowd. You know what I’d do if I wanted to stamp myself as a nonconformist? I’d start a write-in movement for Lyndon Johnson.
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Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF FT1HE LITTLE cutie-pie filling out an employment form puzzled momentarily over the line for “Length of residence at present address," then filled in, “About thirtyeight feet—not counting the garage.”
* * «
In Michael David Harris' engaging book about TV star and columnist Ed Sullivan’s career, “Always on Sunday," there is told the day when Ed and the great Jimmy Durante rode out to Halloran General Hospital to entertain the wounded war veterans there. Durante explained in advance that he had two very remunerative radio dates scheduled for later that very day so that he would have time to do only one number. When he actually did that number, however, the audience was so ecstatic that he grabbed the microphone and did two more complete routines. Sullivan cried, “You were just great, Jimmy. But now you'll never make those two radio dates of yours.” “Look at the front row of the audience,” Durante told him. “You’ll see why I forgot all about those dates.’’ Ed Sullivan poked his head through the curtain and spotted two soldiers in the center divan. They each had lost an arm and were applauding happily by clapping their two remaining hands
together.
* * *
Up in Nome, Alaska, they staged a beauty contest this spring. The winner, of course, was named "Miss Nomer."
* * *
Woody Allen insists he’s been a hopeless student all his life. “Even in kindergarten,’’ he mourns, “I flunked milk.* C 1968, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
Safer in the park By ISABELLE McC, HALL
WASHINGTON (UPI)- There is little comfort for anyone in what President Johnson’s commission on national violence has
heard so far.
Boiled down, it is this; you are safer in New York’s vast and shadowy Central Park at 4 a.m. than in your own bed, safer in a crowd or alone with a stranger than with your friends
or relatives.
That is the picture that has emerged thus far in testimony from law enforcement specia-
lists.
Today the panel turned to professionals in the clinical aspects of human behavior, psychiatrists and criminologists. They included Dr. Joseph Satten of the Menninger Clinic in Kansas and Leon Radzinowicz of the Institute of Criminology at Cambridge University. Prof. James Vorenberg of the Harvard Law School told the investigators Wednesday twothirds of the nation’s murder and rape victims were friends or former friends of their assailants. Sleep In Park He stated, and Undersecretary of State Nicholas B. Katzenbach agreed, “You are safer from murder at 4 a.m. in Central Park than you are at home in bed.” Katzenbach was chairman and Vorenberg was executive director of Johnson’s crime commission, which has now passed out of existence.
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Services held for
Mrs. Robbins Mrs. Ella Mae (Arta) Robbins, 82, wife of Fred E. Robbins, of R.R. 3 Brazil, died unexpectedly Sept. 28 at the Clay County Hos-
pital.
She had been hospitalized a month ago following a fall at her home in the New England section of Knightsville, in which she suffered a fractured arm. Her injury, although painful, was not of serious nature and she had appeared to be making a normal recovery when she expired during a sudden relapse Saturday Sept.
28, 1968.
Funeral services were held Tuesday at Lawson Chapel. A native of Putnam County, she was a daughter of the late William and Martha (Moore) Watson, and was born on June 1, 1886, at Carpentersville. She had lived in that vicinity before locating in the Brazil area several years
ago.
On June 11,1908, she was united in marriage to Fred E. Robbins, who survives along with a son, Dr. Clarence E. Robbins, of Columbus, where he is serving as superintendent of schools. Other survivors include three grandchildren, Max Robbins,408Edge, wood Drive, Brazil; Joyce and Dale Robbins both of Columbus; and three sisters, Mrs. Della Clark of Greencastle, Mrs. Mary Young of Crawfordsville and Mrs. Gladys Meek of Indiana, polls. Brother Robert W. Allison,pastor of the Staunton Christian Church, officiated and burial was in the Roachdale Cemetery in Putnam County.
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