The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 November 1968 — Page 13
Page 12
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Wednesday, November 27, 1968
Foreign news commentary By PHIL NEWSOM
Couple will reside in Indianapolis following wedding trip
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Mr. and Mrs. Hahn
UPI Foreign News Analyst A quarter of a million troops enabled the Soviets to impress their will upon Czechoslovakia, but they still have not been able to reduce the Czech people to the gray and faceless mask that is the Soviet concept of monolithic communism. When 60,000 Czech students filed peacefully from their classrooms last week-end after a 76-hour sit-in, they proclaimed they had created a “new revolutionary unity.” It was a unity that scarcely needed to be proclaimed. Hospitals had donated milk in their support. Bakeries had supplied bread.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI ) - George C. Wallace chalked up his best third - party Indiana presidential vote percentages in Morgan, Porter, Clark and Lake Counties. Official county-by-county resuits from the Office of Secretary of State Edgar D. Whit, comb showed today that Morgan led the list with 19.5 per cent of all presidential ballots cast for the former Alabama
Prague railway workers warned that not a train would move in or out of Prague should the authorities attempt to deal with the sit-in by force. As the students wound up their sit-in, artists, intellectuals and scientists met to draw up a resolution declaring that there were certain frontiers of freedom that never could be abandoned in science, art, journalism or even in politics. And as the Czech leadership gradually abandoned its reforms under Soviet pressures, it continued also a measure of defiance. On the eve of the 50th anniversary of the foundation of the republic in late October,
rion, Marshall, Noble, Vanderburgh. 8—Allen, Cass, Jay, Kosciusko, Miami, Monroe,Montgomery, Newton, Kush, Wells, White, Fulton, Gibson. 8—Blackford, Decatur, Elkhart, Huntington, Steuben. 7—Adams, Benton, Clinton, DeKalb, Dubois, Spencer. Hoosier
wreaths were placed in the name of President Ludvik Svoboda on the graves of Eduard Benes and Thomas G. Masaryk, architects of a free Czechoslovakia as it emerged in 1918. Censhorship of the press, radio and television, ordered reinstated by the Russians, remained a sometime thing. Journalists drew the censors from their own ranks and plotted new ways to circumvent the Russian edicts. This was revolt Czech style not the Hungarian style which ended in a bloodbath in Budapest and the exile of thousands, but one of sabotage and slow attrition. It left the Russians two alternatives. They could wait it out in the belief they already had accom. plished their purpose or they could move with force as they did in Hungary, creating further embarrassment and disruption to international Communism. By creating an “executive committee” within the Czech party's ruling presidium they had reduced ‘ the power of liberal Communist leader Alexander Dubcek and increased the power of the old hardliners in the person of Deputy Premier Lubomir Strougal, former interior minister in the regime of ousted President Antonin Novotny.
Miss HarriettLareneWilliams, daughter of M r s. Lucille Williams, 202 W. Walnut St. and Mr. Terry Joseph Hahn of Logansport, were united in marriage Saturday, Nov. 23, at the First Christian Church in Green-
castle. The Rev. Maxwell Webb performed the double ring ceremony. The bride, given in marriage by her brother, Mr. Robert Hurst wore a floor length gown of peau
de-soie trimmed in alecon lace. The sleeveless bodice had a natural waist and an A-line skirt trimmed with a lace A-line panel. The coat had a chapel train trimmed with alencon lace. She wore a fingertip silk illusion veil. The bride carried a bouquet of white pixie carnations. Miss Norma Ann Ray served as the bride’s honor attendant. Mrs. Robert Hurst, sister-in-law of the bride, served as bridesmaid. They wore identical floor length gowns of red cut velvet. They had an empire bodice with sheath skirts of chiffon. The chiffon train was attached at the neckline. Their head pieces were single red bows attached to a three tiered veil. The attendants car. ried bouquets of white roses with peppermint and red pixie carnations. Carl Wilson served as his brother-in-law’s best man, and John Mangus served as groomsman. Jim Bishir served as usher. Following the ceremony, a reception was held in the basement of the church. Serving at the reception, were Mrs. Sherry Caldwell, Mrs. Mary Beth Doheny, Miss Linda Hurst, and Miss Kathy Hahn, sister of the groom. Registering guests were Mrs. Sue Williams and Miss Beckie Butler. The couple will reside in Indianapolis following their wedding trip.
Wallace chalks up 19.5 per cent in Morgan
Heart patient plans quiet Thanksgiving dinner at home
By United Press International Mrs. Edward Rigden pushed a wheelchair to the lobby in St. Luke’s Hospital at Milwaukee, Wis., Monday, struggling to hold back tears. In the chair was Mrs. John Anick, 49, in whose chest beat the heart of Mrs. Rigden’s brother. Mr. and Mrs. Anick planned a quiet Thanksgiving at their west Allis, Wis., home. “A member of the family is going to make the dinner and bring it in,” Anick said. Meanwhile, George Debord of Helotes, Tex., the nation's longest surviving heart transplant patient, rallied slightly Monday at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital in Houston but a spokesman said his condition remained serious. And in Baltimore, Md., surgeons completed the world’s 92nd heart transplant in a six. hour operation, giving Sydney Seidenberg of Baltimore the heart of Wilson W. Lieske, 26, of Havre de Grace, Md., who died of brain damage. French doctors lost their second heart transplant patient in a day Monday when house painter Maurice Malvau, 37, died 14 hours after receiving the heart of a woman. The other death was Noel Moissonier, 34, who suffered a heart attack at Lyons after living two weeks with a borrowed heart. But Jose Forez, 49, who
received a new heart Sunday night, was reported in Satisfactory” condition Monday in a Paris hospital. Pastor convicted TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (UPI)— A former pastor of Brazil’s First Christian Church was convicted Monday on separate counts of theft and conspiracy involving a $150,000 church fund scandal. Thirty-four-year-old Earl Cummings of Brazil was found guilty in Vigo Circuit Court, and even before the verdict was handed down Cummings also faced a 51-count indictment for forgery in Clay County. During the trial which began Nov. 12, evidence introduced by the prosecution included one check which allegedly bore Cummings’ signature. The prosecution had charged that Cummings was involved in a conspiracy to intercept $6,000 as part of the church bond issue. Cummings also was slated to appear in Clay Circuit Court on a forgery indictment, but that was postponed pending the outcome of the trial which ended Monday. Cummings also faced five other trials in connection with the investigation. The conviction carries a 1-10 year prison term.
governor. In Porter, it was 18.8 per cent, in Clark 18.5, and in Lake 17. All four either are among the state’s most populous counties or are suburban counties immediately adjacent to big cities. Morgan is a “satellite” of Indianapolis, Porter is neighbor to big Lake, which is the state’s second most populous, and Clark is across the Ohio River from Louisville. Lowest percentage was in Tippecanoe County, home of Purdue University. There, only 4.9 per cent of the presidential voters cast ballots for Wallace. Next lowest was Wabash County, 5.9 per cent, and others were Perry 6.0 and LaGrange 6.9. The ratings of other counties, figured roughly to the nearest percentage; 16—Putnam and Harrison. 15—Brown, Floyd, Jennings, Hendricks. 14—Dearborn, Clay, Hancock, Howard, Johnson, Washington. 13—Fountain, Crawford, Jackson, Jasper, Owen, Parke, Shelby, Starke, Switzerland, Union, Delaware, Vermillion, Wayne. 12—Franklin, Grant, Knox,Lawrence, Posey, Randolph, Ripley, Scott, Sullivan, Vigo, Warrick, Fayette. 11—Carroll, Greene, Henry, La Porte, Madison, Martin, Ohio, Orange, Pike, Pulaski, St. Joseph, Tipton, Warren, Whitley. 10—Bartholomew, Boone, Daviess, Hamilton, Jefferson, Ma-
killed in crash The dead Americans included the pilot and co-pilot and Harold O. Sealock, 44, son of O. G. Sealock of Rushville, Ind. Sealock was a teacher education adviser employed by the Agency for International Development. Sealock also is survived by his wife, Evelyn Bevis Sealock and two daughters. Twenty - five persons were killed in the crash at Savannakhet, Laos. Most of the victims were third country nationals, mainly Thais and Filipinos. Two persons, an American and a Thai, survived. The plane was enroute to Vientiane, the capital of Laos. It crashed shortly after takeoff from the airport near Savannakhet. The fuselage broke in two and a wing broke off upon impact. The plane burned. 'Lancer' Renewed HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — CBS-TV has renewed its new series, "Lancer,” for the balance of the television season.
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