The Mail-Journal, Volume 11, Number 28, Milford, Kosciusko County, 7 August 1974 — Page 11

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Pioneer Davs THURSDAY, FRIDAY A SATURDAY AUGUST 8,9, 10

Sounds of Hope goes from Salzburg to Vaduz, Lucerne

By BERNIECE H. DWYER Our next concert was in a Catholic church in the center of Saint Johanne. The front altar table was moved aside and our group sang with the high altar as a backdrop. People from all nationalities were there. They listened closely to the hour-long concert. Many tarried after the concert for a closer look at our youth and when we boarded the two buses to return to Salzburg, they waved good-bye. On the second Sunday of our tour we participated in the 10 a.m. service of Pfarrkirche Saint Nikolaus in Solbad hall, six miles east of Innsbruch, Austria. The church was of baroque architecture — ornate with gold, marble and silver. Ceiling paintings were in pinks and light blues. Even the pillars were done in art of delicate colors. Paintings were displayed on either side of the nave. Our choir, accompanied by the orchestra, sang its English hymns from the balcony and the priest conducted the service in German from the altar. The harp was carried to the front of the church and the harpist played a Pavene XVI Century tune. Among the gold fixtures of the altar, it looked as if it should always remain there. The congregation listened carefully to our singing, exchanging whispers and once in awhile sneaking backward glances at the choir in the balcony at the rear of the large church. A youth group from Ohio. West, Virginia and Pennsylvania, traveling with the People-to-People organization, came to hear us sing. The hotel manager in Solbad Hall asked our group to sing for other guests in the hotel. He commented that there was a marked contrast in conduct and appearance between our group and that of other American youth who had recently been in his hotel. He added that the Sounds of Hope youth were welcome to return. A Sunday afternoon concert scheduled for Kurhaus Igls took us to a plateau in the Alps several miles from Solbad Hall, Austria. Spectacular views were a dime a

dozen as our bus groaned with every upward mile. Our Dutch driver skillfully negotiated sharp switchbacks and S turns and I found myself praying that our motor would not stop and .hat our airbrakes were in good condition. Our group sang in a shell of Alpine architecture set amidst a park of many acres. People came from all directions sitting on benches in the Alpine sun. Young and old listened with rap attention as the 57 yotaig people and adults sang an hour's program of classic sacred music including “Edelweiss’’ from “The South of Music’’ and concluded with the “Hallelujah Chorus." At the conclusion of the concert the manager of the convention center in appreciation presented our directors with booklets describing the village and park. He invited the group to return for a concert next summer. As always, a number lingered to see how the harp was boxed and loaded. It was with reluctance that we boarded our buses to return to the valley. Kurhaus Igls has to be one of the most beautiful spots on earth. To Switzerland From Austria en route to Lucerne. Switzerland, our highway paralled the swift Inn River for many miles. On eith«*r side of the valley, snow-covered Alps stand sentinal. Small villages have been built in the shadow of these ranges and others are on high plateaus, the tall spires of a church giving first indication of a community. More and more homes are being hastily constructed; in another 10 years, the spaciousness of the Inn River valley will have disappeared. As the valley widens, crops are grown in strips — potatoes, cabbage, corn, rye, alfafa, spinach and fruit. Cleared fields extend so high up the mountain that round stacks of hay are dimunitive. Small weather-beaten shacks stand among the cleared fields for implements and storage. I saw grain being cut by hand. Brown Swiss cattle feed high on mountain pastures. Streams coming from rock atop the mountain fall such distances that they are white torrents; ski tows with the chairs still hanging lead the eye to a cleared area. Having read “Heicli” many times, 1 am sure I saw the very hut she and her grandfather shared and the pastures in which she watched the boats. There is an unusual amount of snow on the high slopes because of Europe’s unseasonable cool summer. Arlberg Pass We drove over the Arlberg Pass which is the highest highway from Austria to Switzerland. Lech, a resort area high in the pass, entices the Dutch royal family for a get-away -from-it-all vacation. Thousands of tourists, all carrying cameras, must have just one more picture of the indescribable views. They have pulled off their VW or Mercedes 2200 to eat a snack and take in the Alpine beauty. I can understand why people who have always lived here can never be happy elsewhere. Illuminated curved tunnels took us through ranges on westward to Switzerland. After a brief stop at Feldkirch on the west border of Austria, we entered Liechtenstein, a tiny independent cointry of 61 square miles. It is one of two principalities in Europe ~ Monacco. being the other. We stopped in Vaduz, its capital, for lunch. There ruler, a prince and his princess, with their five children, live in a castle high above the city. At the border between Liechtenstein and Switzerland one need not stop to be recognized. Only two flags on a bridge over the Rhine indicates the geographic botaidry. My vocabulary is not adequate to describe our Swiss highway. Sheer rock on one side, inches from our bus and precipitous drops on the other side, S curves, illuminated curved tunnels, one of which had an open side with only pillars for support. From the open sideof this tunnel, we looked

Wed., Aug. 7, 1974 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL

out upon Lake Lucerne. The Swiss Home The Swiss home has noticeable characteristics — often three or four stories, rambling, with decorative strips of contrasting lathe. The barn may be a separate structure — often built against a bank to provide a warm stable. Large vegetable gardens and orchards of young fruit trees are being tended. Sweet cherries are being picked. Herds of cattle feed on the high pastures. I wonder when they are brought to the barns for milking. As we approached Lucerne. I saw more industry than at any time since Cologne. Modern plants with their parking lots full of small cars; many high-rise apartments, large banks and department stores as well as flourshing boutiques. Our 59 members were in the Hotel Pilatus in Kriens It was named after the Alp rock pyramid overlooking Lucerne. Near our hotel one could take an aerial cable car to the peak of 7,000 feet. A Tuesday evening concert in Ehgleburg took us to an altitude of 3,287 feet. Engleburg is a holiday resort, especially popular for winter sports.

Indiana’s Original & Largest Open Air Art Festival Thurs. — Sun. Aug. 8-11 Amish Acres, Nappanee A ■ • 4 Full and nights antiqu. popcorn wagon Thursday thru Sunday Punch and Judy puppots ISO artist Marketplace r * i( splitting !■ lighted market area co,n Sending Wf painting competition ,re * shuttle ■ st 000 in Ornes h, H h wheol hike giveaway F/lllll!. Quartet blacksmith .flfl Centennial Celebration quilting Centennial Ball ri<,M 1! ban jot 'iddles guided tours X guitar», square dancers restaurant y M ir I »H Sporti Car Rally th °R aft ■ n • -X X lighted for soda fountain ■ W ■ • 1 y ' night shopping. Free fashion shows ■ '■ ‘ 11 parking for 2.000 cars -Oftl Restaurant open 11 till ♦ \f Art Apii?Acres One Mile West On Highway 6. N»EBgng Fioneei* Bargains that would have had Great Grandpa 23-Skidooing right into our store. So Happy Birthday, pretty little Indian Nappanee. May your next 100 years be sa illustrious, so enjoyable, so great. i ■ 11 coms.kcl , for men and m<n ■ 1«7 E. MARKET ST. PHONE: 773-3732 NAPPANEE

Warsaw's proposed budget is up $1.65 The budget proposed by the city council of Warsaw and clerktreasurer Helen Joan Kindle is up $1.65 from the current budget according to a legal notice which appears elsewhere in this issue. The proposed levies total $4.14. The current rate is $2.49. The council proposes a rate of $3.61 in the general fund to raise $1,115,534. The current rate is $1.99. The proposed rate for cemetery expenses is eight cents and will raise $24,720. The current rate is six cents. The bond funa nas been set at one cent. It is 15 cents this year. The proposed rate would raise $3,090. The park and recreation levy is proposed at) 18 cents to raise $55,622 The current levy is 10 cents. The city planning is to receive a one cent levy for $3,090. There is no city planning on the current rate. Aviation is set at 12 cents. This is up from the current seven cent rate. It will raise $37,081. Police pension is the same at 11 cents to raise $33,991 while the firemen’s pension is up one cent to two cents and will raise $6,180. The proposed $4.14 levy will raise $1,279,380. The council will meet at the city hall at 5 p.m. on August 26 to give final approval to the proposed budget.

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