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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 7
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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 7

Location:
Lafayette, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
7
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THE JOURNAL AND COURIER LAAYETTE IND Tuesday Evening May 5 1964 Search or Attack On Stolen Tot Methodists idel Cuba Continues OK Policy Rumored communities in is The Local Radio LAST NIGHT the the be TODAY and TOMORROW MARS PLAYING ELKS AT ROTH PARK LAKE REEMAN 4 MAY 14th Mann' LAAMETT side only ADDED CARTOON BARGE ALAME ATER COLLISION WITH SHIP An oil barge burned in Mo bile Ala harbor early Tuesday after collid ing with the freighter Prospector A Coast have to wait until Wednes for final settlement will be the Republican nomination joint representative from that been school rule which prohibited married girls from donning caps and gowns and participat ing in graduation ceremonies A total of six girls who mar ried men in service during the past few months will be allowed all privileges of graduation WHEN THE 'LEOPARD' SPOKE THE EARTH NEXT ATTRACTION DR STRANGELOVE' To Visit Africa WASHINGTON (UPI) Mennen Williams assistant BURT LANCASTER Science Curtailment In Egypt Demanded JERUSALEM Israeli Sector (AP) The Israel Parliament Monday night made an and vigorous to the West German government and people to end immediately the activities of German scientists and technicians in Egypt Deputies from all parties said the scientists are destructive weapons that consti tute a danger to oreign Minister Mrs Golda Meir said President Nasser threatens Israel the very rockets he is producing with the aid of German scien tists the nature and severity of which are the subject of reports reaching us through the world CHICAGO (AP) An inten sive nationwide search for a woman in white who stole a baby boy from his arms in Michael Reese Hospital continued Tuesday But after a week of agony and hope there still was no sign of the infant or its abductor Paul Joseph ronczak was just 37 hours old on the after noon of April 27when a woman dressed to resemble a nurse entered the fourth floor mater nity room of Mrs Dora ron czak 28 and took her baby An BI agent sketched a por trait described by witnesses as a remarkable likeness of the woman It has been given na tionwide distribution She is described as about 40 years old 5 feet 4 inches tall 140 pounds ruddy complexioned light color eyes and straight biown hair tinged with gray Police said a week of investi gation has not turned up a solid clue BI agents and police have questioned the hospital staff former employes of Mi chael Reese hospital visitors cab drivers and residents in the vicinity of 35th and Union ive women have been picked up for questioning but all have been cleared A sixth taken into custody Monday in nearby Gary Ind was still being held But Chicago police said there ap peared little likelihood she is the woman being sought The woman is a 45 year old former mental patient She was found wandering in a Gary city park Sunday night Detective Capt Edward Bars ley said she resembled in ap pearance the woman who took the baby He said the BI planned to confront her with Mrs ronczak to see whether the latter might be able to iden tify her Sea Cable Breaks TOKYO (AP) A deep sea telephone cable being laid as the last link of a 5500 mile long Hawaii Japan cable broke Mon day in rough seas 90 miles off Chiba Peninsula The cable ship Long Lines re ported it was going back 20 miles to try to pick up the bro ken end in 4000 foot deep seas with an anchor tory of the Moscow Peking dis pute to portray bitten as an ist opportunist traitor manip ulator stage manager all of which produce the modem revi The author once again seem ing to echo Peking predicts that Romania will be the next Euro pean Communist nation to join Albania in breaking away from the Khrushchev camp He says Romanian Communist chief Gheorghe Gheorgiu Dej a brave man and the world will soon see the Romanian Peoples Republic also proving its na tional Since the book was published Romanian leaders have traveled to Peking and have been pic tured in the forefront of efforts to soft pedal the Moscow Peking dispute But Gheorghiu Dej did fail to show up at a round of Khrushchev meetings recently with satellite leaders Leopoldville and because of his seemed likely to draw a simi lar figure Lou Harris whose poll is pub lished in the Washington Post reported that Wallace may draw 28 per cent of the Democratic vote However he said Wal racial stand would be only a secondary reason for his showing More than half of those sur veyed who favor Wallace do so because of fiscal poli cies Harris said The Republican battle heated up in the last days of the cam paign as former Minnesota Gov Harold Stassen called Sen Barry Goldwater a foe of Social Security and spokesmen denied the charge In a campaign ending news conference Monday Stassen predicted he would upset Gold water and said Republicans re sented naked grab for con of the Indiana GOP by Goldwater former US Sen William Jenner and State Treasurer Robert Hughes favorite for the nomi nation for governor GOLDWATER AVORED Goldwater was heavily fa vored to beat Stassen and two other Republican candidates In dianapolis Negro lawyer rank Beckwith and Joseph Ettl a South Bend lawyer The Democratic presidential primary had three minor candi dates running against Welsh and Wallace Lar (America irst) Daly Chicago furniture jobber and perennial candidate John Latham retired Rockville Ind pipeline worker and Mrs ifi Carpenter Swain from Greenhills Ohio Voters also were nominating congressional candidates in the 11 Indiana districts with 10 in cumbents favored for fairly easy renomination and candidates for all 100 state House of Repre sentative seats and 27 of the 50 state Senate Heated local contests in some areas and school reorganization referendums in nearly half the 92 counties figured to swell the percentage of the stated 2429 780 registered voters going to the 4416 precinct polling places The solidly pro Welsh Demo cratic organization was on the alert to try to block votes by Republicans who might want to support rights stand or merely to embarrass Welsh Republican leaders called on their party members to stay in their own party and some Gold water backers voiced concern privately that rightwing senti ment for Wallace might siphon off some of the1 Arizona sena vote vote total also could be hurt by resentment against the new sales tax which he supported through the courts last year ACE CHALLENGES Indiana voters register by party but when they vote in a primary a record is kept of which ballot they take A voter who attempts to switch from the party' in whose pri nual increase in output per worker since World War II or roughly 3 per cent AL CIO President George Meny one of Monday guests has served notice the abor federation will not be bound by the guideposts 'Walter Reuther' president of the United Automobile Work ers signaled he will ignore them in his contract negotia tions beginning in June with the Big Three automakers General Motors ord and Chrysler Johnson called the wage price guideposts sensible and fair and added: are in the public interest and while I and will not force anyone to follow them I can call them to your attention and ask for your EAST SIDE DRIVE IN Gates open at 6:30 pm show starts at dusk Big Batch of Bees A bee colony or hive may composed of as many as 90000 individual bees according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica point of no return' and that the breaking point is near The book was published in Ceylon late last year It was written in English by a Gunaward Hana a Ceylonese Communist leader who is active in the Asian movement Its text indicates it was virtually dictated by the Chinese The title of the book is WITH Here are a few of the accusa tions against Khrushchev: he made a deal with President John Kennedy for years of and pledged not to support violent revolutions he deliberately built up the October 1962 missile crisis to humiliate idel Castro so that the Cuban regime would be overthrown in favor of Moscow trained Communists he sent agents to Pe king to foment trouble between Chinese and Africans particu larly in the university he plotted the Hungar ian uprising in 1956 in a deal with Yugoslav President Tito only to have it backfire into full blown revolution That he bludgeoned Commu nist ruled nations with threats of economic reprisals so they would toe his line The book said he threatened to boycott the sugar of one nation (obvi ously Cuba) and that he threat ened to expel others from the Communist family hihting that those threatened were Romania and North Viet Nam or North Korea his policies caused re bellion against his rule in Soviet central Asia That the Romanian party accused him of advocating abandonment of collectivization Khrushchev had to purge Czechoslovakia and East German Communist leaders for opposing his line he bled Red China for repayment of every ruble loaned for the prosecution of the Korean war DOCUMENTS CITED The book citing little known documents which must have been supplied by the Red Chi nese goes far back in the his are better than big ones is not necessarily He said larg er schools could offer a better curriculum Mullen said he objected to the one school idea and believed that north side and south high schools were the answer think significant the school board has not united on the high school Mullen said Murphy told the group that the board had been considering the high school expansion prob lem for several years and con sidering all factors believed it had arrived at the right deci sion Roberts Brock 2121 9th St asked the two school group: have you people been? All these questions have been hashed through months Several of the group said they realized they should have be come interested in the high school expansion program earlier interested in it now and we are trying to catch one of them stated were home watching TV when we should have been attending school board another said PUBLICITY RAPPED Ralph Daily 2035 9th St who was not a member of the two high school group said he felt the school board and news media had done a poor job of informing the public about planning for the proposed new high school He said he felt the news media help from being biased on some of the things resulting from school planning and advo cated the school launching its own public relations program to inform the public of its activ ities including possible hiring of a public information director The school board granted per mission to four more high school senior girls married to service men to participate in com mencement exercises Last month the board made an exception in a long standing Methodists to abolish segregation in their and in WASHINGTON (AP) Ru mors are flying once again among Cuban exiles that new efforts will be made soon to topple Prime Minister idel Castro These reports increasingly persistent both in Washington and in Miami say the Castro Communist regime soon may find itself under terrorist and sabotage attacks both from within Cuba and from without The exiles say the outside groups will come from areas other than the United States Such a move they explain would avoid international com plications for Washington as well as interference by US planes and ships with such raid ing parties US officials appeared sur prised when asked about the rumors They indicated they had no information whatever about any such plans by the exiles although they said they had read recently a statement by one Cuban exile leader Manolo Ray now living in Puerto Rico that he and other leaders will be fighting inside Cuba by May 20 The only major organized ef fort to overthrow the Castro government came in April 1961 when Cuban exiles with US help failed in a sea and land attack against the Castro forces at the Bay of Pigs The exiles say a different type operation much smaller than the Bay of Pigs in some ways and much larger in others being planned thing they want except military In 1951 the poll found 45 per cent in agreement with the statement and 41 per ent in dis agreement in 1960 29 per cent agreed and 51 per cent dis agreed When the freedom of the press question was made more spe cific only 11 per cent voted for no limitation on the sale and dis tribution of objectionable print ed matter And it is shown most felt the federal government is than parents in 'de fining objectionable what is sexy obscene NO CENSORSHIP ALARM of federal thought con trol through censorship are not very the administrator of the poll said On freedom of speech the statement should prohibit some people from mak ing public received the following votes: 1951 34 per cent agree 53 per cent dis agree 13 per cent undecided 1960 25 per cent agree 51 Vatican Dean To Visit US ROME (AP) Eugene Cardi nal Tisserant dean of the Col lege of Cardinals left by plane for New York Tuesday for a visit to the United States The rench prelate will in augurate a library at Notre Dame University South Bend Ind and will read a papal letter there He will also visit Gonzaga University at Spokane Wash By WILLIAM RYAN AP Soociol Correspondent A Chinese inspired book cir culating in Asia levels sensa tional charges against Soviet Premier Khrushchev and illu minates the monumental Mos cow Peking battle for domina tion of revolutionary movements in the underdeveloped world Bursting with anti Khrushchev fury the book accuses the So viet leader of such things as plotting against idel regime in Cuba and advocating abandonment of the Communist struggle to take over South Viet Nam and Laos in Southeast Asia The charges and documenta tion could have come only from Peking With latest lament that the Chinese are try ing to freeze the Soviet Union out of Asia indications are that the dispute has gone past the Show Times LAAYETTE (through Wednesday May 6 The Leopard 2:00 5:00 8:00 pm MARS (through Thurs day May 7) Muscle Beach Party 1:00 3:02 5:04 7:06 9:08 WASHINGTON (AP) Presi 1 dent Johnson concerned lest a prosperous economy breed in flation has urged labor leaders to help hold the wage price line by adhering to and government guideposts for wage settlements Speaking to 139 union chiefs and their wives at a White House dinner Monday night Johnson as he did at a similar gathering of industrialists last week dangled the carrot of "another tax cut in a few if the economy keeps expanding But he warned: surely do not want this promise of progress to be threatened by in Some of the union leaders al ready have announced they would ignore the guideposts in negotiations this year and John son lectured them on the possi ble hazards in a growing econo my "As demand increases and unemployment falls managers will be tempted to raise prices spite of the already high profits and continuing excess capacity and unions will be tempted to force wages up fast er than productivity in spite of already high wages and continu ing excessive' Johnson said BLAME IS TRADED He said he knew one side is inclined to blame the other for irresponsibility but he declared: do not believe labor or business wants a renewed wage price spiral any more than Bar ry Goldwater wants to run on the same ticket with Nelson Rockefeller such a spiral steals sav ings easts away at real wages the meager income of our older gives orders and jobs to foreign competitors undermines the soundness 1 of the Johnson faced a difficult task in trying to convince the union leaders to keep with the guide lines which were set forth by the late President John Ken nedy They provide for wage settle ments limited to industry's an US Hungary Will Negotiate WASHINGTON (AP) United States and Hungary have agreed to start quiet negotia tions aimed at improving rela tions authoritative sources re ported Monday sec retary of state for African af fairs is to leave riday for a two week trip to five African na tions at President re quest The White House said Mon day that Johnson had asked Williams to visit Senegal Mali Ghana and the two Congo re publics at Brazzaville and continuing interest in African a worldwide the Methodist will day for for Tippecanoe and Warren Coun ties Warren 20 precincts will use paper ballots exclusive ly and officials there do not expect to know the final count of the race between State Rep Maurice Goodnight La fayette and challenger Merle Carte of Lafayette until Wednesday morning per cent disagree 22 per cent undecided On the right to petition the government the statement was petitions circulated should not be allowed by the The results: 1951 34 per cent agree 34 per cent disagree 32 per cent undecided I960 30 per cent agree 34 per cent disagree 34 per cent undecided On communism the question was you think that mem bers of the Communist party in this country should be allowed to speak on the The results: 1951 20 per cent should 65 per cent should not 15 per cent undecided per cent should 63 per cent should not 16 per cent unde cided is not the authors state in 1951 only one in four (26 per cent) would forego the right of search without warrant and in 1961 one in three (33 per cent) would yield this ATTITUDES LEARNED A ray of hope the studies show is that attitudes devel oped are learned and as such can be unlearned Prof Remmers was bom in Norden Germany and came to the United States at age eight He was an instructor at Colo rado College for a year before coming to Purdue in 1923 and was named director of the edu cational reference division in 1928 the post he held at the time of his retirement The doctoral candidates who assisted him with and conducted some of the polls quoted in the book and Roy Horton Jr Richard ranklin Arthur Kirsch Robert Corder Rob ert Mainer Dorothy Gates Rodgers Elmer Struening Larry Dennis Cannon Vermillion Jr and Left wich American students believe in the Bill of Rights but when pinned down on 'specific issues they are not in full agreement with the freedoms outlined in those Constitutional amend ments That is the main conclusion drawn by the book Demo cratic Attitudes in American edited by Prof Her mann Remmers Purdue Uni versity professor emeritus of psychology The book is a scholarly work outlining the methodology used and tables compiled by the Pur due Opinion Panel polls of high school and college students Prof Remmers retired from Purdue last year after 35 years on the teaching staff He orig inated the Purdue Opinion Panel in 1945 and the book is com piled from polls designed and administered by Remmers and 10 of his doctoral candidates over a 10 year period The polls turned up even bet ter success in the 1960 presiden tial balloting than polls of adults missing the actual Kennedy Johnson outcome by one half of one per cent ASCIST TRAIT APPEARS The book states that at least one in five high school students do not agree with the freedoms guaranteed by the Bill of Rights and the same ones who reject the freedoms tend to accept the tenets of fascism yet they tend to call themselves the Americans and supporters of democracy It is found that students who have taken civics courses are less in agreement with the Bill of Rights than those who have not Among some of the findings: While the Bill of Rights grants freedom of the press more than half those polled in 1960 dis agreed with the statement that and magazines should be allowed to print any Moscoso Resigns WASHINGTON (AP) Teo doro Moscoso a one time bright star in the Kennedy administra tion as key man in the Alliance for Progress but shunted to a lesser task by President John son has turned in his resigna tion Moscoso a Puerto Rican is resigning to accept an appoint ment by Gov Luis Munoz Marin of Puerto Rico as a member of a federal commission to study Puerto future political status Johnson said Ngo Can's Mercy Appeal Denied SAIGON South Viet Nam (UPI) The government Tues day turned down appeals for mercy by the brother of former President Ngo Dinh Diem and by his onetime secret police chief Both will be executed by the guillotine within five days Ngo Dinh Can brother of the assassinated president and Phan Quang Dong who served Can as secret police boss in cen tral Viet Nam were convicted by a revolutionary court of mur der illegal arrest extortion and actions damaging the national economy The court condemned them to death by the guillotine Guard cutter later took the barge under tow and beached it The Prospector flying the Panamanian flag was outbound at the time of the collision (AP Wirephoto) WBAA Purdue no On Your Dial TUESDAY NIGHT Dinner Hour Songs of the People 7:30 WBAA Election Returns 9:45 Dav In Review WEDNESDAY MORNING 7:00 Timepiece 8:00 Concert News Meditation Books 9:30 News Omnibus Homemakers Medical Journal 10:45 Henry Milo 11:00 Old Swedish Organs Women of Achievement World News Noon 12:00 arm orum WEDNESDAY ATERNOON Music Shop 1:00 Reader's Corner Tasters Toasters Roasters News Markets 2:05 Symphony News Radio Russian Living with Adolescents News Plotters Plocards Story land Special Deadline WASH Lafayette 1450 On Your Diol TUESDAY NIGHT News inal Washington ulton Lewis WEDNESDAY MORNING Rural Route Report 8:30 Sports Review 9:05 Stork Market 10:00 Market 10:45 Marv Blaine Time WEDNESDAY ATERNOON 12:00 News 5:05 Sports 5:55 Sports WAZY Lafayette 141 On Your Dial WEDNESDAY MORNING Inspiration arm Report Lafayette Police 10:45 Community Calendar News Weather WEDNESDAY NIGHT News ulton Lewis Nlghtwmds DRIVE TN THEATRE EAST SOUTH STREET At The Country Club NOW SERVING DINNERS Tues Wed Thu'rs 5 to 9 PM ri Sat 5 to 10 PM School Continued from Page 1 Gary Negroes Will Protest Court Decision GARY Ind (AP) Gary Ne gro leaders showed disappoint ment and the school administra tion had no comment Tuesday on the US Supreme re fusal to order changes in school district boundaries The Supreme Court declined Monday to upset a ruling that boundaries need not be changed to force integration when they have been honestly drawn with no intention of segregating races I am disap said Mrs Jeanette Strong head of the Gary chap ter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People She declined to comment on possible further moves by the NAACP but said the board of directors will meet Thursday night board will take some ac tion but what this action is I she said School Supt Lee Gilbert refused to discuss the ruling He said through his secretary that he had not been notified formal ly of the Supreme Court action mary he had been voting may be challenged If challenged he must sign an affidavit that he supported a majority of candidates of the party whose ballot he seeks in the last general election and in tends to do the same in the coming general election indirect bid for Re publican crossovers led Welsh to charge that Wallace was mak ing a plea for sup port from the GOP and John Birch Society NO WRITE INS A write in vote invalidates entire ballot in Indiana The state has had only two previous presidential primaries under the 1953 law setting them up In the last one in 1960 the total vote was 864654 for both parties The primary law says the na tional convention delegates of both parties who are named at the state conventions in June must vote for the primary win ner on the first ballot at the national conventions if his name is actually placed in nomination Indiana has 51 Democratic dele gate votes and 32 Republican There is no penalty or en forcement provision in the law and Welsh organization leaders intend to permit selection of any Wallace delegates no matter how the primary vote goes Welsh went to his home town of Vincennes to vote Tuesday while Wallace was in Alabama to vote in his primary Both planned to be back in Indi anapolis Tuesday night Primary Continued from Page 1 nt BYPASS 52 and HIGHWAY 25 DOUBLE BURGER BASKET 45c Includes: 2 Hamburger Patties on a Bun rench ries 1 Regular Drink OPEN DAILY 11 AM to 11 PM "31' lit 3 Voting Continued from Page 1 Labor Leaders Urged To Honor Guideposts On Rights PITTSBURGH (AP) The Methodist Church after spirited debate has adopted a sweeping policy on civil rights designed to persuade a i a 1 churches general Delegates to Conference of Church approved the policy by a show of hands Monday night The policy is embodied in a report by the Committee on Christian Social Concerns It is now church policy but is not church law This means that the policy cannot be enforced by such measures as expulsion or cen sure Some of the highlights of the policy are: and church officials are to open their" churches to person1 of all races bodies organiza tions and individual Methodists are to use their influence to se cure fair employment practices and non segregated services in the corporations in which they hold investments Equal rights should be pro vided for voting lav enforce ment education employment housing and public accommoda tions of racial segre gation including de facto segre gation in all public and Meth odist schools The term was omitted from a substitute paragraph before the report came to a vote before about 900 delegates The original version would Save condoned civil disobedi ence in instances where legal recouse is 'K' Charged as Plotter Traitor In Peking Inspired Publication 10000 Bleeps meet 5000 Bilynis RANKIE AVALON ANNETTE UN (CELLO i STARRING IN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL IN CO LO Students Would Deny Liberties They avor as 'Bill of Rights' PAUL NEWMAN ELKE SOMMSR THE PRIZE PLUS MICHAEL CRAIG MYLENE DEMONGEOT "UPSTAIRS AND DOWNSTAIRS" 7 I st Kiir WiwMaMMr wIHI mat A nn csv pirates THEe LEOPARD rafDRIVTN THEATRE EAST south street LAMMETT.

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