Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 9, Decatur, Adams County, 12 January 1953 — Page 1
Vol. LI. No. 9.
_ —_ — —— - The Daily Democrat. ■■ ' |< I, , I 1 .. ..—.lti, , mLii... II
\OUUMEI DECATUR/INDIANA, MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 12,1903. ■»'!. 1 I . "■" »■'■'■)■>■■■■■—' j.— ■ .1/ . . _l.. ■■ ... , —— . ■ , • THE ICE MAN. I DAME HUMOR AGAIN. A REAL LIVE JOKE. «»T ™ oil held. ELECTION REFORM, an event of pleasure ' . — i-A- 7 . If .1 ■ vTf The XW. Place Company * XTXT *' CONGRESSMAN CROMER “““ STXTC* " Ilßstaltae . Mis Inlro- ** ' Reaping a Bountiful Gwefnl "G known 10 o»«Hy .U o»r MwJto, WM DtMOvKAI. J»T , «illioon<w» a»U. J/ tv.-—J***>•,«““ to '’“■•«“? t- n3rV€St> ' !uarri*d M <•«.■»! Moulnna.cn H» in n otixkXuMor in tba Cloorr rTI 1113 DCS. * k “M*** — CLnMu>a»4atto Mr. SidnnfWillio, Lnaf Oil corn pan J ebn-b o«M pm- -J ” Toqidbl tb*y rill jwnp into bg.**y j : \ ayoue« bu«inN* ana of Uial cite. duoinc oil wnllonod food )mm* near /!]' abdn, inabnr up thmr lady Tnaade 5 - A Miw Ki.« bred k.r. until about \ ■J. r . !lnWn . v T-c rl/ - 11TM Wan-p and bM in Inter- J and eKAteifb M»t> nncinc yj . ’rearago/acd was M Van- Ai<OSY ENJOYED BY Tift EIGHTH terestiDg •oumbw o( CLi< ago inrest- |,l bappr *** ■p* l ?? / dft YEAB*S St'PPLY AGGREGATES A Ch*f’« t Jubiivk’g and cxlier stores in buCTDIfT rfiVTDFCCMUU or * *s* property, with chances ueiw PFUAITIFC ANfttttCTFtf* MB *^*?^i*T*^.J? Il **** Ct'‘ the citv/ SLe was popular and has WSTRICT CvNuRCmMAN. that he will sell out to them. Before ntArT rtNALTiti ADKUUSiLALv a Mils and • half to lbs flchiHMV CHL EVEN COLB 300 JOB TONS. an A rmv Ct good who Wrth tu deal was closed they of course M rAIMMATM4r m *..>«* bMM» a ptesa taaanoa for aateftatnUr j o r iapP .SM uxitbn unc there ii deaired to sen what they noee buvin< ' CORRLFTM T» lALLST. tnont >Ju»y Uot. By tbn nny Th* J W Pier* romnane hare ia io the'eeat. or aavwbere elae. for and proposed » viait to th* oil field. < ' tbft arent upon Aadne ’ 1 Pttstwr,ctOtMrmtw I nsxtsj- - j • o« ftofoi gov. 01 bi ’ -• W » . | \ . ! ' . v ;}■ ■. T . I: ' ' . i ■’ 11 > *- '«■ • ' Li di
-- - -j 'AS ■ I John H. Heller i Co-found'er of Say Hundreds Os Teachers f Communists V Senate Committee ■ Reports On Result Os Investigations / WASHINGTON UP -j The mjl.ate Internal security subconunittee said today la., preliminary Anvestigation of th|e nation's schools indicates that “many hundreds’* of America's teachers are Comiftiu- ; > nißts. J j ; f In a 13-page report on hearings it helci recently ih New York, the Subcommittee called; for a fhll scale injUriy by the 83rd congress and various legislatures iift°,. “subversive influenced in education.” f While the 'senators suggested thab -their own 'subcommittee be assigned the task, the house American activities committee Already has announced it intendsSto \ look for (j.’ommunisin in the schools-, this year. Ssn. Joseph R. ikfulr-. thy R-Wi|sl also kas indicated liis senate' permanent investigating committee Would like to take bn the job. r Senate Republican leader Rdb;ert; A. Taft said OOP leaders J>fthe? house and senate will mejet soon to work out an agreement tin I who investigates what„.in order to avoid “overlapping” and jurisdictional squabbles. ’ W I Taft\also expressed doubt wheth-1 er atty congresional group shod|d try td ferret out individual Coiii-1 in uni rits on school faculties. He j -said it is appropriate for Congress I to investigate any; “organized L’om* * nijmist activities’’ in the schools, but “t d'c|n’t btelieye we should tty to investigate individual profeso.i's and say, ‘Here's a Communist; throw him out.’” } J The internal security subcom-, | mittee, \heajded bar Sen. Pat Mp-1 Uarran D-Nev. in the 82nrl cdp- j gress, said it barely scratched tbp \ surface of the problem in its-pub-! \lic hearings in New York last fgtl. ! But it it found evidence the i f New York Teachers Union “is On ' j instrument of the! Communist patty” and there Were ( about 500 Communist teachers in York City early in 1950, before the cifr I board of education undertook vigorous measures to weed them out. "Despite the unquestioned loyalty and self-sacrifiping devotion to duty of the preponderant bulk of America’s teachers,” w the' subcohnmittee saicjl. ythere are yet many hundreds Aof teachers who * are Communists.” The subcommittee recommended that school authorities and colleges undertake programs to “teach both teachers and school pupils the nature pf the Communist consplra- ■ - " 1 r : v - fJ •./ “Testimony before the subcorh-' i mittee indicated specifically that (Tafa Ta Pace Five) I •. v < K * i. ' * 1 -k-'4
' : . ; h_ ■ ' 7 ' |l '' ' • ' DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
Daily Democr|it Is 50 Years Old Today
T- ' ___ tii L\r■ - ! / Fifty jears ago today the Decatur Daily Democrat was born. The heading of the froht! pafee of the first edition in reproduced above. Co-’ounders of tjhe city’s new-born babe in the daily publishing field were the late L.* 0. Ellingham. who was publisher of the Weekly Decafur Democrat, and John H. Hellei\ current publisher,; who was associated with Mr. 011ihgham in the publishing of the weekly Decatur Democrat. In 1916, Mr. Ellingham became published '|of the Fort Wayne Journal-Gqzefte. Born as "The, pally Democrat.’? the daily added Decatur to its mast-? head when the 'l'vfee.kly suspended publication after 11913. j The .daily was founded as m result 'of the establishing of rural free mail deft liviry frpm the pecalur poet office on’December 1, 1902. The Decatur Journal, then published! by HarryDaniel, issued a dally, which in 1903 was purchased by C. M. Kenyon., Readei% were noi longer content with receiving a weekly newspaper, so the daily field was opened in she nation’s' ste-p of progress 'in mail delivery to :t je homes in the rural ireas. >’ j 'I Birthday anniversaries are sentimental observances in life’s span and eyen in business early years in the march of time cannot be avoided. This newspaper is the successojr to the: Decatur Eagle, a weekly ?stablishe< by H. L. Phillips in 1857. Th "ough consolidations and suspensions, the Eagle was absorbed by jMr. Ellingham’s Democrat Press itj 1894. which at that t huh changed‘.its hime to the Democrat. Roosevelt was the 26th president of the United States when the daily was | fbundpM. Twta notable locdi events are listed in history as occurring in 1903, the building of the Decatur library! building, ard the Big Store fire, otj June 28 of that year. * s \Mr Heller, noWj vacationing in \\e*t Palm Beach. Florida, became associated with Mr. Ellingham in 1898 \hd five years later became the business manager of the new ed 'thej guiding irjflucbce of the newspaper, relinquishingKjpnly some of his arduous duties with the elec- | tion of j his son, Dick D. Heller, as president of The Decatur Democrat Company. and i Arthur R. Holtl,house, editor of thejnewspaper. Mr. j Heller is Vice-president arid Charles E. Holthobse is treasurer of the I cqrporatiOn. j ; Those associated in publishing of | this newspaper like to think .that i the paper has grown with Decatur. In 1900. the city's popular iouwlas 4142, and by 1908.; it was estimated at around 4.500. The paper’s circulation prpbably reached 2,000 by I the latter date. Mj The paper’s daily; press run now exceeds 4 450 and the 1950 census (gave/Decatur’s population as 7,271 and A<fanis county./22,3.98 Today, Decatur is a thrivingl| county seat, I surrounded by the richest agricultural area in what is known as the ; “bread-basket of tHta patio i;” It is j the home of wondejrful people and nationally known arid world famous industries, which haye at peaks employed as many as? 2,200 persons. This newspaper employs .21 persons and has an annual jpayroll exceeding $75,000. Approximately four earloads of newsprint are ebnsumed annually ip its 308 daily issues. While Decatur ha,S been good to all who live, work and engage in business within its;corporate limits, thd publisher and jhisi associates know of no place :ip all tjhe world where more kindly consideration has always been; given by citisens and subscriber* .to thQir home newspaper, j ■ . "Our mission is to obtain and print the news for our family of ■ readers and to serve the commun- ■ (Tar. To Fi«o Sla>,
: Spiritual Emphasis ; Services Are Closed Big Crowd Attends Closing On Sunday s Nearjy 900 people participated ‘ in the closing service of Spiritual i Life Emphasis week at t|ie Decatur high school auditorium Sunday evening. It was an impressive • meeting to witness this Urge re- ; sponse pf the people and surrounding conimuwty to a ; union church endeavor, ijbwell J. , Smith,. president ,of DeciSir’s As- ,. sociated 4 Churches’ , sed the .Council’s appreciation for the fine spirit of coißieration which had been in the services, all week. • In the Sunday Edward Jaberg. secretarwLof the church’s council, read Scripture lesson. The chapman of j the committee on arramgements ! for the week, the Rev. Fi.’f|<, Willard. offered the evening?'prayer. The Rev< Samuel EmericW ministerial association president;,.presided,- I | ' With Mrs. Earl her Hammond organ, \ and Mrs, Meadows serving as pianist. Meadows led the large congregation in an inspiring service of sdpg. His ' direction of great hymns ajpd choruses which he had taught'<|te people during the week added’dgreatly to the meeting. The community choir, tpade up of people >Om numerous churches, sang the ; ®nthem, “Hallelujah! What A Savior." Dr. Meadows’ final of the week was taken froaf'ii 1 . Kings and chapter 8. He dramamed the account of the meeting ofjfflke pro-, phet Elijah and the prophets of ißaal. He recounted the agreement between them, that eacjffij would <Torn To Pose Harvard President Named Ambassador James B. Conant Named To Germany NEW YORK (UP) — ielect Eisenhower announced; today the appointment of Corraibt, presidenit of Harvard University, -to be United Sta(fjs* high commissioner for German^l Conant will become this■ country’s first ambassador to the West German Republic when th«i;!AHied peace arrangements are completed The United States lwr|Wiified the German treaty, but Germany . has not. , ' Eisenhower sdjd the meht was made after con>f|rences with John Foster Dulles, incoming ! secretary of state. Conanl has , been president of Harvard since ! 1933 and is 59 years old. If ; Oonanlt served as chairman of i the natibnal defense research . commiesion from 1941 to lsf6, and had an important role in dej velopmenit of atomic energy dur- . ing World War M. J J . Eisenhower and Dulles haid in I a statement that they I IMeved Conant is "peculiarly to I interpret United States ideals and ( aspirations to the leaders and people pf Germany." They &%id he . would jnake a significant I button to the developrt|ent of j friendship between the U. ’B. and . Germany and to the peaceful asso--5 ovation of Germans with thb other free peoples of Western Europe. I The high commissionerW post f now is vacant because Waiter J, . Donnelly a career diplomat, retired Dec. 31. !
ONLY DAILY NgWDPAPM COUNTY
Decatur, Indiana, January, 12/1953. —* 1— — . .. - - . . *
24 Cardinals Installed In Solemn Rises Pope Pius Formally Creates Cardinals In Consistory Today VATICAN CITY, UP 4- Pope Pius XII formally created today 24 new cardinal princes of. the Roman Cktholic church, including pn4 American, in a solemn secret consistory stepped in centuries old pageantry and tradition, r The 76-yea V-old pope uttered a solemn “gmen/’ to conclude ata ancient Latin ritual which fulfilW his long dream of bringing the Sacred College of Cardinals to' Its full strength of 70 for, the fii’st time in almost 250 yearb. Barring another consistory daring the reign of the 261st sovpr--eign on the Throne of St. Peter, one of t ; he members of the 7(F-man college will become the Uexlt pose. The peal of a. small silver bgll, rung by the pope himself/ signalled to the outside world that he and the old cardinals of the church assembled in majestic consistorial hall, and elevated to cardinals, 24 prelates from 13 countries, among them/ Archbishop Jambs Francis Mrlntyre of la>s Angeles. Special :papal couriers immediately fanned but across Rome carrying the official "biglletto di nomina" —notice of nomination tb the 17 of thel 24 new cardinals who came to Rome for their solemn elevation. Only, the bittter persecution of the Catholic church in Communist countries kept tjhe occasion froih being one .of fpll. rejoicing. Twipof the ntew; cardinals. Yugoslav/ Archbishop Aloykiug Stbpinac andl Polish Archbishpp’ Stefan Wyszyi shki, stayed in their 'Qommunitlt controlled countries, but became cgrdinals nonetheless. Among the old cardinals ered here for the consistory, .the' most conspicuous absentee was Josef Cardinal Mindszenty, impriS; oned of Communist Hungary. ' • The 24. n|ew cardinals raised tp an all-time high of 27 the dumber >ofj countries represented in the sli* jered college, the highest council of the Catholic church. Today’s great consistory began to form when scarlet-clad carditfsals assembled in the richly decorated 17th century consistorial hall.’ They seated themselves on large red pews before * the gilt papal throne. Moments later; the pope —a frail but erect figure in a snpW white robe, a small jacket of red Velvet and red stole embroidered in pure gold — made his entrance on foot. He was accompanied by high prelates and dignitaries\of the papal court and flanked by his personal escort of nbble guards with drawn sabers and Swiss guard* with glittering halberds of fourj centuries ago. The assembled cardinals arose, doffed their iacarlet skull caps and bowed in reverence before the spiritual head of the workEs 375,000,000 Catholics. j ? \ The pontiff in a clear voice officially opened the ’ consistory with an ancient Latin prayer beginning “Adsumus’’, here we are together, and invoking the special aid of the Holy Ghost for the undertaking. ; The pope then delivered to the members of the college present, a Latin allocution dealing with world problems and the present situation of the church. ; l / ;
—r— .4-- ,■■■■ * ' ■ — r —r —• — Craig Inaugurated As Governor; GOP Controls Indiana -I- r —— — -J - : — . .. .
61 Persons Die As Result Os Storms I \ Clearing, Colder * Weather In Nation ; ’ • ■! ' Y * By UNITED PRESS and colder weather pushed into the eastern states today, but rain and snow flurries stil| plagued koine sections. l if Temperatures propped from the Afid-Atlantic States northeastward through New England, where residents struggled to get back to nor*tnißl after a week’-end storm of ice Itid snow, „ ..The storm, and bad weather iobther sections of the nation during the week end, left 61 persons dead, 45 of them in the New iEngland States... \ As the clear weather moved eastward. New Yorkers ,saw the sun for the first time since last Wednesday. Rain fell along parts cd the Mid-Atlantic coast and snow flurries Were reported in New England. already blanketed by as much as 20 inches of snow. / Parts of the midwest, meanwhile, enjoyed a January warm spell. Imperial. Neb., recorded a summery 65 degrees and other . readings in the 60k and high 50’3 were Reported. i , Weathermen said, however, that t ca>,hl air seeping down from western Canada prohdlily wohld end the warm weather. The frigid air was expected to tumble the mer<,mry to below zero in northern Montana and North Dakqia tonight ' gnd gradually spread southward. In the area around New York City, were restoring utilities to more than 50,000 suburban families. High winds and ice had knocked out electric and telephone lines in northern Westchester, northern New Jersey and Connecticut. At the peak of the trouble, about 150;000 houses w’ere without electric power and without hekt. The weather bureau promised that the generally weather prevailing over most of the north Would extend into the east soon. Moderate to heavy showers were reported in the Far West from Northern California! to Washington. A dense fog covered Los Angeles, Calif., and much of the southern part of the state to end a warm • (Tura Ta Page Five) ! . •"' V. '! t Lincoln PTA Survey I Groups MeelTonight Seven Committees Meet This Evening •-• •' I. \ \ i (Members of the seven Lincoln 1 P. ,T. A. survey committees will nieet tonight at the Decatur libratry Jor the first time since thd distribution of the queries to thk groups December 19 by chairman of the activity, Mrs. Margaret Finlayson. ' Tonight’s meeting is part of the evidence to show that public interest in civic affairs in Decatur is on the rise. A fcroup said to represent 50 percent of all the taxes collected in the city, the industrial division of the Chamber of Cominerce, is noii hard at work gathering data from public records to support the view that they should have more to say in public matters than they do now. It came out during a meeting last week of legislators apd business interested in the gross income tax question, that the industrial division is planning tp send representatives to each public meeting of all the administrative bodies in the city and county. This would include the Adams county memorial hospital, !j the library board, the meetings of the Decatur school board, the county commissioners. the Decatur city council; \and other bodies. - This, said a high source, would inform the group of all matters .callink for an expenditure of funds, which! directly or indirectly, is supplied in part by the aforementioned industrial division of the Chamber of Commerce. ! ’
Ike And GOP Leadep Agree On Patronage SI i Senate Republican Leaders,|lke Agree On Patronage Moves NEW YORkIuP;— Presidentelect Eisenhower met with the high command his new administration in a\ rouiid-table conference today after reaching agreement on patronage wifh,*<ttepuhlican senate Readers. The cabinet M’as assembled for the first time the round-table, session began .|>Ver jlunch in the swank South of the Commodore Hotel. ' [Eisenhower in£ calling the meeting last week announced dt be devoted to a|general discussion “of problems! the hew administration, \both domestic and foreign." The ilsenhower senior appointees and Vice President Richard M. Nixon were scheduled to confer both today and Tuesday. A tremendous' cheer went, up from crowds gathered in the corridors as Eisenhower and Nixon entered South Room. Only Herbert the new attorney absent. He was in Washington on business. Just before luinch the bigthree senate Republican leaders said they had reached complete agreement with Eisenhower to end the confusion federal jqb appointments. : Majority leader Robert A. Taft, WiHiam F. Knowland of California and Eugene D. MilHkin of Colorado conferred, for 90 nfinutes with the incoming president at his Commodore Hotel headquarters. ' Knowland is chairman of the Republican policy committee in the senate- and iTrtni To Base Six) Picketing At Light Plant Continuing i Lone Picket Is On ■Now For Third Week After two weeks ! of picketing the i\ew light and power plant, under construction at Seventh and Dayton streets, the'building and trades council of Fort; Wayne, ah A,, iF. of L affiliate, has succeeded in causing marked speculation as to “wtljaVs going to happen” \ Ernest Redden, a Fort Wayne lalmr leader, put oh the there is never more than one picket on duty—in protest, he said, over Cal Yost's (YoSt ■Construction Col not hiring union help for hie own brews. Redden spoke of talking to Yost *‘for the past 10 years” abqut no£ hiring union men, and result. This picketing, Redden indicated, was the , result of snubbing. Yoet said “it’s a free Til hire whomever I feel like.” L. C. city power and light chief, made several observations today. result of the picketing the plum* 3 ® llß nor the electricians— union work-ers—-have done fey dtirisiti-e-rSLlyle work at all in thjt building. The crane that Will Im usbd to move the. diesei the plant is thought by to have been shaped aiufjf and when it does acceding to Pettibone, Yost’s men ®ill rig up some emergency line s</it’can be operaied. As for tW diesel engine connections, Pettibone inferred “it was anyone’s guesa.” Pettibone declined to speculate on the eventual ettCfct of the holdup on the time tihedule of the diesel planti. It due to have , gone through test# sometime in the' summer or la|< epribg. , —44— j-' INDIANA WgATHER Partly cloudy and warmer tonight. Tuesday Mrily cloudy and mild.\ Low tqnight 25-33. High Tuesday north, 46- “ *’ u,h - , ’
HE • a KBS i - George N. Craig %\ - 1 Drop Criminal Proceeding On Oil Companies Drop Proceedings In The Interest Os National Security | WASHINGTON UP President Truman directed the Attorney general today to drop criminal proceeding against five American oil companies in the “interest of national security if the companies produce subpenaed records.” ! Mr. Truman directed Attorney Oeneral James P. McGranery to evonfer “promptly” with oil company representatives to determine if Qjey will agree to enter into a stipulation to produce the ; subpenaed documents. “If they will,” Mr. Truman Said in a letter,. “I ask that a civil proceeding be instituted accord* ingly and that appropriate steps be Aaken to -cause the termination of the pending grand jury proceedings.” <McGranery scheduled a 1 p.m., c.s.t., meeting with attorneys for 20 oil companies. Mr. Truman said that, because of factors which have emerged since the gratid jury began its investigation, he now believes “the interest of national security : might be best served at this time” by a civil suit rather than a criminal But Mr. Trunian said this should be done only If the five companies agree to produce documents which have been subpenaed by the grand jury. v , The grand jury has been investigating an alleged international oil cartel. Government officials have feared that should the grand jury return a criminal indictment against the oil companies* foreign companies which have contracts with the companies could 1 use t the indictment »as a pretext th invalidate the contracts. Also one of the basic tenets ,of American foreign policy is to encourage whenever possible the investment of private American capital in foreign lands for development of strategic materials needed for the United States defense. This could be jeopardized by a criminal indictment. Mr, Truman issued his directive a few minutes after he conferred with acting chairman Stephen J. ■Spingatrn of the federal trade commission. Spingarn told reporters afterwards he had the “distinct impression” that the government was planning to drop its attempt to get Criminal Indictments against five major American oil companies and substitute civil action instead. iSplngarn also disclosed Mr. Truman had denied him permission to attend' last week’s meeting of the national security council. The council was understood to have decided then to drop criminal acy tlon against the com pAnles !
Price Five Cents
Pledges War On Vice In Ist Address Gorge N. Craig Is Inaugurated Today ,As 38th Governor t INDIANAPOLIS. UP — Republican George N. Craig was inaugurated today as Indiana’s .?B<th governor and immediaitely pledged a war on "organized vice” and an administration unscarred by politics. Craig received the oath of office before 4.000 persons in the R*t a tiehouse rotunda. He started his term at 315.000 a year salary, nearly twice that cf his predecessor. The former American Legion national commander i>aM in his Inaugural address: “A department of government scarred by politics and diseased by th& virus of public neglect i* rot only lethargic bat more eixI penwive than one in a vigorous suute of efficiency . “There is no room in Indiana for the tbrees erf organized vice and this administration. The efil forces of . gambling and vice, wjll curtailed by rigid enfotY-emeiir of present h?w aud. I hope, the • enactment of more arduous penelr ties -” ’ - •: '’l 1 Craig, who headed the Legion i as national comsndnder in 1949, ’ and Harold W. Handley of La’Porte were sworn in as governor and lieutenant-governor - the state’s two highest executive poets \ —in a noon ceremony in the Capi- ' tol rotunda. .'j . ' > j He was >the stage’s second Got* governor nation-wide Democratic sweeps gave that party the governor’s chair ftbiir out of fivi» times in 20 years. Thousands of 4 persons of both political faiths cheered Gov. Henry F. flqhricker, only two- 4 term governor in |lie state’s history, ami Craig, whb. was elected by 233,000 votes last November. Craig, an orator who hails from Clay county—named after state© ■ man orator Henry Clay—took offlee in \ a situation strangeOy similar to Paul V. McNiStUe inauguration 20 years ago, McNutt also was a Legion past commander. A . Democrat, he launched a sweeping administra- 4 tive reorganization program making him one of the most powerful 4 men in Hooeier hisrtoty. Craig has announced* he also wiH reorganize state government expansively. If a friendly legislature helps 'him; ife, ‘ too, will have broad ■ power. * SChricker. 69, who lost a bid to unseat Sen. William E. Jenner ■two months ago, plans to rest at his old home in Knox indefinitely. He Is a former banker and weekly newspaper publisher. Craig moved into the comfortable governor’s mansion in the luxurious and shady Indianapolis North Side with bis wife. Kathryn, arid their little daughter Margey.* zY son, John, will May in. Brazil until he is graduated next summer from high school. The Craigs will keep their home * in Brazil, where Craig was a lawyer tor yeans, and hope to slip away occasionally for week ends there. Craig has a pocketful of reorganization plans, the Republicans have four-fifths of the house and senate seats, and the only Democrat who Wil! stay among statehouee elective officials tor many dkys is a supreme court judge. If Craig’s hopes comes true, this means clear sailing for his legislative proposals which would replace the Schricker administfti.lion’s system of government by , agencies with an 11-man cabinet receiving orders from and responsible tor administratiin to the governor’s office. Not everyone is as optimistic. . \ . Democrat lawmakers mapped opposition to seme of Craig's proposals, and. most significantly. (Van T« Page Five)
