Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 46, Decatur, Adams County, 24 February 1953 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
Temple Prexy Heads Voice Os America Dr. Robert Johnson Is Appointed To Succeed Compton WASHINGTON pp-The White House today announced the selection of Dr. Robert L. Johnson, president of Temple University, to head the state department’s foreign information service which includes the Voice of America. Johnson succeeds Dr. Wilson S. • Compton, whose resignation Was (announced last week in the midst of an Investigation of the Voice program by Sen: Joseph R. McCarthy’s senate permanent investigating subcommittee; \ ’ L White House press secretary James C. Hagerty said Johnson’s appointment, in no way would "cut across” current congressional investigation of. the Voice of America. - ' 4 Hagerty said Johnson took the post at the request of the President and secretary of state John Foster Dulles. i McCarthy, whose subcommittee (has been lookihg into charges .of Waste and mismanagement in the **ate department's sprawling international information setup, said meanwhile his group will gladly look into the merits of the Voice pf America’s sea-going radio station, the Vagabond. Sen. Styles Bridges R-N. H. asked for the inquiry to help his appropriations committee decide whether die government should spell out r 53,714,000 for a third floating transmitter. \ , \ . The state department has said the first sea transmitter, a converted coast guard cutter now anchored at the Island of Rhodes, can. be a powerful weapon for driving/ Voice broadcasts behind the Iron'
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Curtain in spite of Russian jamming. J I . 7 It also has announced that it obtains permission from the country in which the floating station is anchored to' avoid international law complications as much as possible. Broadcasts are not madp on the open sea. , Meantime, McCarthy said his subcommittee Is trying to straighten out “p. lot of conflicting’ testimony" it received Monday during a long closed sessions. The Wisconsin Republican did not elaborate on the "Conflicts." y Says New Zealand Beef Poor Eating Beef Dehydrated For Five Months OMAHA, Neb. UP — Ecpnomy.priced New Zealand beef, that sent* shoppers spurryingjitp meat markets across the nation, makes low quality eating, bn economist says. Franca Kutish, extension economist at lowa State College told listeners of WOW-TV’s "Farm Short Course" Monday night 1 that the beef has been dehydrated five months. Kutisli said most of it is reported to be off color — practically white and dry." ‘‘lt’s worth on|y what they are charging-tor it/,*! he said. Kutish estimates the total j amount df New Zealand beef which has been sold is equal to only a twoday cattle kill in this “country. It replaces the normal import of Canadian meat which' has been stopped because of hpof ind mouth disease there. ~ ’ ? L ’ . | j \ The; Kenniston meat packing plant has announced it will sell New Zealand beef at' Oelwein, 1a,., Wednesday for ; 29 ( cents a pound. Tpe company saidj' the imported beef is no different | from domestic varieties. , -< New Zealand beef will go on sale March 2 !at Fort Dodge, Webster Uity and Dakota City.
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Marine Corps Piles Rescued By Copter Shot Down 60 Miles Behind Enemy Lines AN AIR BASE IN UP —A marine corps pilot wad shot down 60 miles behind Communist lines today and ries>cued by! p, helicopter while other, planes JtuSld off a ring of wildly shooting Reds — one on horseback. ■ 1® The pilot, Maj. David (’lceland, Santa Ana, Calif., was woujiled in the ankle while being ; hauled aboard the helicopter. i / A helicopter crewman alsp was hit in the hand as he reached outside thle plane tp help life Cleeland. Neither woujnd was spinous. The air force fescue helicopter hovered only a foot off the tglround as the' downed pilot was Hauled aboard. His flyinlg buddies Uptake dive after dive with blazip£ machine guns against the clpsing circle of CommunMa. The rescue sh|p was mil five times. | bleeland, who was on hjWjO'lst combat mission after extending his Korean tour, was bomb|ng a Cdmrnunis-t nail bridge when 10 s Corsair was crippled by a bjiiyst of anti-aircraft fire. j|i He made a cHa»h-landiug| and immediately earns under ’ heavy Red ground fire. . . \ Cleeland fooled the Reids by shaping his flight suit Inta a hu-man-like shape and placing his crash helmet on o,p. He s|ei the dummy atop the pane, exposed to the heaviest fire, and thenmwent arqund the other side. Thyne he waited. “I never thought tney come in because 'he ground fire iwes so heavy,” he iiaid, i |» "Finally, the helicopter appeared and settled down, while bthe marine Corsairs buzzed around to keep the Reds back." i “ n ■< If you have something to Hill or rooms ' for rent, t*y a Dedfpcrat Want Add. It brings results,>j|)
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA i > i »
State Detective In Robbery Investigation Staler! detective Truman Bierie entered | the investigation yesterday of tjjie Saturday n|ght attempted safecracking of an office safe at tfie Goodyear Service store, 121 North Second street, which netted the wpUld-be thieves nothing. PolicS|l chief James Borders, In charge |pf the investigation, said “we haye some evidence, - nut h» said no pne was Implicated yet. Daylight Time Bill Defeated In Senate Vo# Eichhorn Bill v 1$ filled By Senate INDIANAPOLIS, life—The Indiana senate defeated today a bitt maikjhg daylight saving time compulsory during summer mouths. The action virtually killed the "slow” yersus "fast” time issue for thfs Session of the legislature. Sen, yon A. l Eichhorn's biM origintalty called for Indiana to move out of -the central into the eastern |Ume zone, thereby advancing flocks one hour tire yeaf-a.-ound a time schedule like that which most Hoosier cities observe in. summer. But a Senate committee amended the Ulhiondale Democrat's measure jb daylight saving time, now prohibited by a “toothless” laW keeping governmental unit tik)»)kp on “M-ow” time. Sen, Robert L. I Brokenburr, RInftianapplis. fought for passage during; spirited debate before the hill was ijejeAted, 27 to 17., ‘-ThbJ almpie object is to make time the i same throughout the State,” he) said. ' \ SenMeiipreeidbnt .pro tern John W. Vaiti IlNeas, R-Valparaiso, opposed 'bill on the argument "people W>nt abide by a law they don’t But Brokenburr said more tho 80 percent of Hoosiers ignore thib CST law, indicating it is unpoptliar. <
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Armistice Officers Reject Red Protest Deny Allied Planes ; Over Neutral Area .PANMUNJOM, Korea, (UP) 4- • United Nations armistice officers flatly rejected today a Communist 'potest that Allied warplanes flew over the Panmunjwn neutral area Sunday. But the Conimunists came back a second protest over the detl th of a Red prisoner in a Koje Inland prisoner of war camp and the wounding of another oh Pangarti Island. Both sides exchanged letters at a i>ribf liaisob officers’ meeting called by thei Communists. The Reds made no mention of Gen. Mark Clark’s (request for an exchange , of seriously sick and .wounded prisoners of war. \ "Evidence adduced at the joint •inveetigation ra| conclusive that no hostile act was committed against Etet conference site area,” said IJ. N. Col. Willard B t Carlock in rejecting the Red protest of ah overflight.' ’ ! The U. N. prisoner of war command announced in Pusan that a Chinese Communisit prisoner ' of war was found hanged In an enclosure on Chejii Island Saturday, apparently a suicide. U. N. officials expected khe incident would provoke another "automatic prpteot" from the Reds. y —
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Boy Injured When Struck By Auto JJmmle Eiting, 7, route 2 .received treatment at the Adama pownty memorial hospital Monday at about 3:30 p.m. after he was struck .by a car driven by Ernest Fegley, 56. 122 North Second street, who, as he headed east on Monroe approaching Fourth street, according to police reports, was unable to stop when Jimmie dashed out from between two parked cars and was knocked down. The! lad’s injuries are to an ankle; the exact nature is undetermined Jimmie is the son of Mr. and Airs, Robert C. Eiting, route 2 - | n ... Russia Trying To Woo Arab Nations CHICAGO UP — Former Gov. Adlaij E. Stevenson said Russia is trying) to woo. Arab' nations with Its riqent anti-Semitic outbreaks. Stevenson, defeated Democratic presidential told 1,200 members* ■Becalogue, society ,of Jewish lawyers, Monday night that tRe anti-Semitic wave is “Hitler’s ghost eferging from the walls of the Krtemlip to accomplish in. death what he could not do in life.” reau ijn Washington, D. C., estimates Soviet Russia’s population at 207 j milliop, and sayk the USSR is growing at the rate of 3 million 'a\ year. ' Ll
Asks Congress Junk Non-Communisf Oath Labor Board Leader In Request Today WASHINGTON UPChairman Paul M. Herzog of the national labor relations board urged Congress today to junk the non-Com-munist oath for udion leaders because it has "outlived .its usefulness.” \ He made the plea in testimony before the house labor committee which is holding hearings on pro* posed Amendments to the controversial Taft-Hartley labor law. Hertog said congress should drop the non-Cornmunist affidavit requirement id favor of a. “new and more direct attack . . . upon the problem of Communism in certain labor unions.” He said the oaths just didn’t munism in labor unions, should be "some outside tribunal sucli W the assigned not to the NLRB but to subversive activities board which would possess the skills to inquire into and decide the issue.” Herzog emphasized - that tl)e board, yhicb must execute the law was not taking a stand one wj|y or the other on moat of the recommended changes in the Taft-Hartiky act. ,He said the paths; just didnt’ work. Indications that suspect
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1953
union officers have evaded them have “become more aggravated,” he said. A federal court ruled against the NLRB’s attempt) to prevent abuse. Herzog urged congress ndt to increase the (board’s responsibilities because giving employers and unions the greatest possible freedom to work out their own problems “still seems to us the best road to industrial stability.”
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