Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 90, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1951 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Airplane-Stealing Pilot Being Sough! / ■ i " J ! ■ ■ ; f i Eastern Airliner 4 Forced Off Runway ii Evansville, Ind., April 16.—(UP) — FBI agents alerted midwest air ports today* for a plane-stealing pilot who forced a. passengerladen Eastern airliner off the runway so he could take off and escape arrest. The pilot was identified as Cecil M. Hurt, 40, of Denver, Colo., who came within inches of a head-on Crash with the big airship just as FBI men and police were closing in for the arrest. , r Hurt has been the object of a widespread search since he allegedly stole a plane at Dupont; Colo., on March 6. ; i Two passengers on the Eastern ship wef-e released after they told police that they had chartered Hurt and his stolen plane to fly them from Waverly, Tenn., here where they boarded the Eastern plane. They told police that Hurt had , been around the Waverly airport for about a week. He said he was going into the charter plane busi'ness:. j The Eastern plane was taxiing down the runway preparing to takeoff when Hurt’s plane roared down the opposite end of the runway. ' To avoid a head on collision, the pilot of the Eastern plane swerved off the runway and Hurt took off. Neither the crew nor the passengers were hurt. I . Harvey G. Foster,, special agent of the FBI said that a wirtant will be issued for the arrest of Hurt charging violation of the Dyer act. The Dyer act prohibits transportation of a stolen vehicle across a state line. t ‘ \ ’ \ British Labor Party Leader Is Mourned V‘ : \ . Ernest Bevin Dies 4 After >Heart Attack \ ; London, April 16.—(.UP)— Winston Churchill and foreign secretary Herbert Morrison were to pay tribute to the late Ernest Bevin at thp opejnlng of the commons session today. will speak for ailing I prlnie minister Clement R. Attlee L anil Churchill as Conservative patty, leader. wIU 4cJiv,er the customary 1 address for the opposition. pevin, wheelhorse of the Labpr patty, died of a heart attack Saturday a few weeks after relinquish- & ing his post as foreign secretary on hisr7oth birthday. A family service will precede his cremation Wednesday. j . Attlee left | his hospital bed last night to deliver a nation-wide radio tribute to Bevin as a “great Englishman.’’ Attlee, suffering from a recurrent duodenal ulcer, said Bevin "strove patiently and earnestly to try to prepare the war-time partnership with Soviet Russia but could not prevail against their intranslge- / ante.” ' \ ; BERNE HIGH : ; (Continued From Page One) i ficer' Schindler that when he was in the building Sunday nothing was ' aniiss. The breakin was discovered and reported when he reported for work today. . • * ' —r-* 1 ■ S*V" Dishwashing To save time apd dishwashing »' when a recipe calls tdr milk/ measure dry ingredients with your cup first, then use the same cupvto measure milk. \ I .f' ’ i " ~~7‘ l ■“ ' 4 ' World Council Leader sees Rights Declaration “Adequate A secretary of the World Council of Churches said that while the Universal Declaration of Human Rights has some defects, it is, ’on the. whole, an “adequate document. Dr.* O. Frederick Nolde of Pniladelphia, the World Council’s secretary \ for international affairs, made the comment in a: statement to Religious News Service immediately following adoption of the i, j '
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tion by the UN General Assembly. “Even though the declaration has with its provisions,” he said, “it no power to bind nations to comply can have certain very practical consequences. “For the first time in history, there is agreement on a board definitions of humah\ rights, including not only those whien have won progressive acceptance over centuries hut also a fairly compehensive group of social and economicrights.” | | ; Dr. Nolde stressed that the deL H- ,/\ \ . . I ? —' r~ —
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|deration is the first, step towards i ■ the adoption of a lengally-binding ! Covenant of Human Rights, |to ■ I which many nations have already I pledged their support. t v JAPS GIVE ’ I (Continued From Paae One). I 1 : — his successor as supreme commandler both of the. forces fighting in' Korea and of the allied occupation of Japan, headed the army, air force and naval commanders who shook hands with tfie departing 'five-star
' general. i No one said anything about the fact that he had been dismissed from, his commands by President Truman and was returning home without a military assignment. As far as the military commander and tne Japanese were concerned, Ma; 1 . Arthur was returning home a con-< quering hero. •MacArthur was touched by thd reception. His face betrayed His emotions. Several members of his party wept, auuong them the Chijp* e.se Amah—nursemaid— who accom-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
panied the general, his wife and then infant son on th'eir escape from Corregidnr in early days of < world war W POISONOUS (Continued Page Que) that would n r n t be X an Immediate danger to those lying down the barrier. ' .It is known that the government has been working on methods of radiological warfare for some time. G-pre’s letter j indicated that the
method did not. involve \an actual bomb blast; , k One method of spreading the radiological poisoning reportedly would be to use a so-called "fizzle” A-bomb —one »hat would not actually detonate but would spread radia-. tion. \ , "" i A big difficulty in spreading radioactive material is in transporting such deadly material. Gore apparently has information which the general public does not. When testimony is .released on appropriations subcommittee hear
ings on the a’omic energy eommis* sion, frequently there are references where the testimony has gone “off the record.” i Gore f i n that. 1 : \ \ As for the method of poisoning the ground; Gore said “I have.some ' knowledge of the new atomic weapons and also of the corollary developments such As surface radioLogical contamination, etc.” /*'S ometh in g' catcadysmic, it • seeing to me. \is called for/’ Gore wrote? “We have it. “Please considet using it.”
MONDAY, APRIL 18, ,1.951
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