Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 46, Decatur, Adams County, 24 February 1953 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
ASKS CONGRESS <Coatf«ned From Fj»ife O»e> are trying to grab unifftrwater petroleum deposits whoaUlworth has been estimated up to ! S|00!000,000,600. Sen. Spessard L. HoUlnd D-Fla. \ . • ' I: J
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Is sponsor of a bill to give the States Ownership to their historic boundaries. Sen. Price Daniel DTex. would extend the legislation to cover tertitory to the Continental Shelf.- Daniel has proposed joint federal-state management of the outer 'belt, with the states getting
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37’£ per cent of imy oil revenui from it. -, '• ; ill| ' \ ' l|' —* —3 —T*| — ■ ilb Discriminating Thief Steals Only Whisky ~ ! ii! - PERTH AMRY.j K. J. VP —
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H - ; i - THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECAIVR, INDIANA
Police said a discriminating |hief Invoke into an inn here, igrtored money and jeiwelry in the Jpash register, and stole six bottles of the Dasin Inn’s finest whisky. | 1 --—- i Trade ip a Good Town—Decatur!
Wiley Urging Care On Pad Repudiation Says U, S. Should ' Consult Her Allies ' WASHINGTON, UP —Chairman ] Alexander"*Wiley of the senate for- i eign relations committee said today the 'United States should con- ’ suit its Allies before attempting, to i repudiate any agreements with Russia. The Wisconsin Republican said he was anxious to avoid "another free-for-aM” on foreign policy )ike the one that followed . the order freeing Formosa to attack Ootpmunist China. President Eisenhower 'has asked congress to subscribe to a resolution condemning violation of such wartime agreements r.s the Yalta pact. Wiley called his committee into session to decide -whether the resolution should 'be considered by the full group or referred to a sub-committee headed by senate Republican leader Robert A. Taft. His warning about Allied consultation was directed at a number of Republican senators who have called for outright repudia lion of the controversial secret agrejemen'ts with Russia. U. S. Allies fear that such drastic action would Invite Moscow to denounce agreements which have worked to the advantage of the free world, including the\ arrangement by which the Big 'three occupy West Berlin. Senate > Democratic leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas Monday night called for passage of 'the resolution "as written by the President and his advisers." Sen. Mike Mansfield. D-Mont., said the "futtire of bipartisan policy might well be adversely aly fected" by a fight over the issue. Wilfey said earlier that he com sidered the resolution "disappointing” and that congress should strengthen it. But before acting, he said his committee would solicit the views of the State department, and through it. the ideas of Britain and other Allies. > Sen. William F. Knowkind, RCalif., .said he would have some suggestions for putting mere teeth in the resolution. But Knowland a member <rf Taft’s subcommittee, "said the end product profliably will not lie much stronger than the 1952 OOP platform. The platform pledged the government to "retpudiate alt commitments contained in secret understandings such as those of Yalta which aid Communist enslavements’’ and to state that the United States “looks happily forward” to the independence of captive peoples. ' Mr. Eisenhower’tr resolution would decflare the U. 3. "rejects any interpretations or applications” of the’ pacts which have been “perverted” to! subjugate free peoples. L I \ . I \ Former Nazi General Dies Monday Night i Von Rundstedt Dies After Long Illness HANNOVER, Germany UP — Former Field Marshal Karl Rudolf Gerd Von Rundstedt* the man who directed Hitler’s last-gasp Battle of the Bulge in an attempt to break the back of the Allied invasion of Europe, died Monday night. His death was announced today by members of his family. The ailing, 78-year-old Prussian militarist had been living in seclusion \here since 1949 when the British government ruled he was too ill to face trial as a war criminal. Von Rundstedt was Hitler’s Wfcst;ern Front commander when the Western Allies opened their second P, front invasion of Europe and gserved in that capacity from 1944 tuntil early in 1945. I He was classified as a Nazi offender” by the British and twas scheduled to have faced a war Icrimes trial, y | Ailing when captured in 1945; his steadily declining health led to his Release from a military hospital In he was confined in Hamburg In May, 1949 and the subsequent |hritish decision that he should not stand trial. (One of his last public appearnces was made Oct. 9, 1952, when e attended the funeral of his wife, Louise. I His military career ended May 1, 1945 when he was captured by American troops at Bad Tolz, Germany. I He said then that the Ardennes offensive —better known las the I tattle of the Bulge—which handed !ie Allies, their worst setback of tie European Invasion, was Orered personally by Hitler. He said e disagreed with its value and trategy and would not have orered such a gamble himself without direct instructions from Hitler, j At the time of his capture Von Rundstedt was suffering from the defects of a heart attack. He never regained his he<h. j' of his family said the funeral will be held Saturday. |i <
Rodney Dee Brodie. Sits In Highchair -CHICAGO UP — Rodney Dee Brodie, survivor, of surgery that separated hifri i from' his Siamese twin, sat in a highchair to eat for the time, Monday. \ . The 17-month-old boy wgs "propped upj” -a little to help him sit, a hospital spokesman said. The Spokesman said the boy will undergo another operation soon to complete a skin covering over thfe top of his head. . | ' Blames U. S. For Red-lsrtal Woes Russian Newspaper Hits Imperialism MOSCOW, (UP) —The United States was responsible for all the anti-Soviet acts which led to the break of diplomatic relations between the Soviet Union and Israel, the Russian government newspaper Izvestia said today. The U. S.« c ponsored acts included the bombing of the Soviet legation ip Tel Aviv, the newspaper said. Russia broke relations with Israel Felb. 11 for “openly incited hostile acts against the Soviet Union." • ' "The bombing outrage in Tel Aviv showed with all clarity that t-hp Zionist Jewish Bourgeois; nationalist clique was one of the most obedient tools of American imperialism,” Izvestia said. The newspaper said that former U S. secretary of the treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. and t-wo New York congressmen,, Emanual Celler, a Democrat, and Jacob K. Javits, a Republican, had, worked out a plan to make Israel America’s principal anti - Communist stronghold in the Middle East. Izvestia eaid that although the late Israeli President Chaim Weiz-ma-nn and other Zionist leaders were paid agents of British intelligence the real Zionist bosses always have been the United State®. \ Terre Haute Records First Traffic Death TERRE HAUTE UP — Indiana’s seventh largest city recorded it? first 1 1953 traffic death Monday when Anton Ellihger, 55, Terre Haute, was killed by a physician’s car. Dr 1 . Werner P. Meyn, 34. Terre Haute, sajd he did not see Ellinger before the accident. Charles Bruner, another motorist, told police he saw Ellihger lying ip the dtreet before he was struck and vainly attempted to warn Meyn by blinking his lights and blowing his horn.
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TEACHERS (Contlnne< Fr«a* P«<e Oae) their answered might, tend to incriminate them. r Young -said, .‘T feel I have been sumihoned before an inquisition." lie added that to ask whether he is a Communist is to "go into the sabred realm of my privates opinion."! Young denies -ne teaches Communism in the classroom and told 'he subcommittee-
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1953
“Insofar as I am p good teacher, I hope the students look up to nie." _ Do you think Communists should be allowed to. teach?” Jenner asked. I*lf they are competent, yes," Young replied. Trade in a Good Town —Decatur. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Add. It brings results.
