Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 85, Decatur, Adams County, 10 April 1953 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
MAY DELAY ■ <C4nH»ned Fr<*t Vggr One) T equipment. > ~ ‘ Navy jiopes starting an atomic powered carried soon were revealed by former Secretary Dian A. Kin ball just he left nfttee in January. I|e. said 12 Fbprestal dass ships should be buKt _ amt at eight should have nu- / clear jitter. The Fonesttal and ,Athe Saratoga, already are vfider construction. , -J Kimball said the navy hoped ’ that Stiip No. 3 would have atomic power. The'ship itself was provided for/in the Truman administration proposed budget for fiscal 1954. Plans for development of a nuclear power plant •‘suitable for pro* ) pulsion of large.-ft aval vessels such as aircraft carriers" were announce llast Atigust by the atomic < nnergy commission. The contracted to, Westinghouse Electrie Ccrp.. to be carried out at the Be tis Plant neat Pittsburgh. ' Pa. - . An a ternative to cancelling the atomic-]towered carrier project; tit was re wrted, might be to eliminate th a fyurth Forrestal class’ ship witch,;the navy wants to lay down i i fiscal 1955. Funds that would have been sought for that one then could be applied to carrier No. 3. y '' ■ - k ’1 Jf yot have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a bemocral* Want A,dd. It brings results.
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Atomic Explosion Scheduled Saturday JLAS, VEGAS? Nev. UP — Government scientists rushed preparations at Yucca Fla| proving grounds today f it the fifth; atomic explosion of the current test strifes, expected at < awn Saturoi-yl The aromici energy commission would not admit officially that antwhei top-secret nuclear experiment was about to. b® held at the proving grounds, (5 miles northwest of here, but ajill the usual . indications were present. Collins Refuses To Answer Committee Ex-Congressional Aijle Is Questioned » WASHINGTON t’P —A former congressional aide refused today to tell senate invhs.ti£atprs whether he was part of a Communist spy jring in the’government or a boyhood friend of Alger Hiss? The witness, Henry H. Collins Jr. also refused to tell the senate internal security, slubcommittee whether he tried to recruit state department personnel Ifor a Soviet spy ring, and whether he knew Whittaker Chambers, I the former Communist spy courier who wrote that Collins did. | Collins, who formerly was a staff member of several Congressional committees, said ttie answers might tend to, incriminate him. - However, in a statement he said “at no time have I|l knowingly engaged, in any activity’ against the interests of my country.” . But Colins refused to 'some questions because J be said “men of integrity, myself included, find thempelvbs harassed I by inquisitions as ,to their opinions, associations and friendships and by irresponsible: accusations Os disreputable witnesses who make it a lucrative profession to bear false witness against others.” Collins, a princeton and Har-' vard graduate how living l in Bronxville, N. Y„ testified he had worked_.for th a national recovery administration, then for the soil conservation section of the department of agriculture. He refused to say whether he was ajCommunist in this period lor whether die belonged tp the Harold :oday iihat if ' hey. expect to sell in the agriculture department.
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Receive Review Os New Indiana Laws i) ! Prosecutor, County Attorney At Meeting t Adams county prosecuting attorp- - ey Lewis L. Smith'and eouhty at- ; torney David Macklin went. to - Indianapolis Thursday for a review 1 of some of the new laws passed in the 1953 state legislature that are of particular immediate internet to peofße here. ? In an interview with Crawford Parker, secretary of state, Sinith received in full the new compulsory school law that is aimed, said Smith, at the. parents of truant children and holds them responsible for their attendance at schools. Another facet of the school law provides that the local county * superintendent : shall retain the " sole responsibility for pressing any ’ action against alleged infractors of the-law. Also, instead 6f follow- , ing the former where • the truant case comesl into juvenile court, whose Records are shroudv ed from the public, the case is entered in circuit court as a cHmc inal action. - v ’ Any- parents found guilty of breaking the provisions of the act k may be fined up to SSOO [and sent , to the\ state farm for not more ■ than six months, t The law states that parents shall ' be responsible for thefj- children’s , attendance at schools and may be constrained to, upon the discretion of the county superintendent, produce a note from an accredited doctor; within six days of demand either while the child is out of school or has returned' to classes. The purpose of the law, set forth, in article 10 of the 13 article/ Which the law; includes, is for “efficient and < speedy measures to enforce the other 15 articles of the law.” , I ’ " Formerly the procedure to get ’ any enforcement on the school law was a (ponderous and lengthy one that often took months and sometimes years, a good > exa-rnple of which is the present difficulty over the Amish school.:ln the old parts of which ahe repealed through the n«\w one- -there being an emergency clause putting the hew law into immediate affect- • an action had to variously be filed with the superintendent of public instruction with long range motions that oftdn times proved frustrating to all parties involved. \ There has been some anxiety expressed in certain official quarters in the county over; what will become of . the suit by Noah Wengerd against. Wilbur Young, the state superintendent of public instruction, which was neceshary a$ part of the enforcement procedure of the old act. ‘ Since that part of the old act is voided by the provisions of the new one, there appears to be no reason for the case pending. But until now. none of the parties has made a move in getting a dismissal or has made a further motion, Smith got a copy of an act changing the penalities levied against proven drunken drivers. It now. becomes mandatory that the license of an offender guilty of drunken driving, have his license revoked, on the .first offense, for one year. On the second offence, and thereafter, there will be a suspension of two years. : The commissioner of motor vehicles may revoke the license of an offender even if not so ordered by the court. This law is in effect at this time. - , ? Another law alters the punishment of proven hit-and-runners.
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Whoso formerly the minimum penalty for a hit-and-run was SSO and 10 dr yg in jail, it ils now SSOO and six months on the state farm. This’ act must be certified perfore it goes in force. Fui-ther, learned the prosecutor, persons who make false statement? bn crime reports to police officers may be liable for a fine of SIOO and; t p to 60 days in jail. This law, said Smith, is aimed at persons who fill in affidavits with statement? they know to be false. Information that is found false thust be proved to have been offered willfully. Another act that may be of makes it an offensfc to llttet the state highways witshout authorization and names a of from $25 to SIOO and no less than nine nor more than 30 days in jail. BUILDINGS ARE Hfewtlnwed From Poo One.)[ others were just blown dowij.f In) Western Indiana, Sgt. Herinan Freed! of the sthte police saidhhe hail ah Lafayette was “so bad khat it broke glass in autos and chipped paint on auto roofs.” The state pgtrolmen on emergency ddty could only estimate that “hundjreds of thousands of dollars” of damage w-as inflicted by . the violent storms. . V I At Bismarck, 111., the twicers caused at least one death indirectly. Ervin Grider, 60, died *df a heart' attack during the stoims. and authorities said his death may ha\/ been hastened by tpe disaster. STEVENS SAYS (Comtlmned From Pmge Owe) previous schedules. For five ammunition types which have been described in shortage reports as “hot” and “critical”-—165 and 106 mm howitzer shells, and ammunition for —
•\•4t■':\ , < . . \ ■ I 1 &00DNEW& for dill /bETTIR LIVING! — -gS jf— „ e iief£ I —: ra FA r I y l j —l / s I • x—. ■ "■ ; I r***—*l I r ; // ■ \ r* vi<Vz ! > \ f "R- - * :r J . Vs-y y \ I - r—*~~* I rif-, <*>>-, / ’ L' I 9;,— —•/ wL fK* / 6I G I '' ~x I WB -A J / * t 'A//p / / £Mi4fir w / >T - ■ MLCU HZ - / n. 6 **»ve /# » th / \ \ \ M ’'l /> .> ** e n f/, e - g > ' i ’ r f & 9<t . \ ' / ts % L *t> Of . this p 4 **' g\ : ' --•- 's■ I ' '~' < az >, O/ h Al # *o ***• > IpRICES were reported down again this week. But whether the / ' 3 '' lc °^bt r p ''ic* t / A Bureau of Labor Statistics announces another drop in prices, as; , ; W P^ k of ***„ no° / it did last Monday—or whether GE pay rises further again in dollars / >6 e *** a/,* 6 ®** / —it means better living—better buying power—ior General Electric \ / / er/ e«' '*'*•* <y ec / employees arid their families. Since last July both have happened— / t / r L that is, GE pay has gone up, while the cost-of-living has gone down. / h t ° ht • 3 / > e r« _ CtJ t t o f ° Ce *t g i: s Today’s lower prices and higher GE Pay & Benefits, including the f ■ °°° 9 , / new wage increase now available to all GE employees* mean that / er */ to / the buying power of GE pay can be about to Id cents an • gjU / hour—higher than last July., ’ i \ 1 / 1 r 0 / ~ .■ ■ \ .1 J ■ ... g. v I 1 \**he of the "^dder n to 10 Ji3%, or higher, became effective as of March 16 \ - >- /or all employees not in union bargaining units. It can become effective on that date tor all employees within bargaining units if Offer 1f0.2 h accepted by the i respective unions involved by April 17. / ' \ 4 • H • . \ - . --al - || ■ .•; ■ MPLOYEI AND FIANT COMMUNITY ItIATIONS ELECTRIC ■ !' -I ■ A l' ■ ■ ■ J . v ■
the 60mm and 81mm and 4.2 inch mortars—far east stocks are now “in excess” of a 90-day authorized supply. ; . He 'Visited United Nations position?l opposite Old Baldy, a strategic korean peak, and found that after the heavy firing in connection with recent fighting there< “there werp more shells at the gun emplacements than there were before.”; One ammunition unit he visited behind the lines had 9,150 tons of ammunition, about 2,150 more than; authorized. Stocks at large depots in I\orea and Japan are up to authorized levels. ■ GROUPS HIT ( (Coatlnmed From Page One) director. "Sure, they are looking for ways to -balance the budget. They* want the fat and frills cut but of the veterans program. So do we.” \ The National Tribune, a 75-year-old weekly veterans .newspaper published here, sounded the GI
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battle cry in its current Issue, assailing Phillips for “sorry inferences; and misstatements” in a speech to trie house. “The veterans administration is over-investigated and underfinanced,” the paper said. ‘tWhat it needs Ms enough money from the congress to db wfiat the American people waht it to do.” i . , 5 L s 4 I . SAYS REDS (Cont(word From rige Oitf) sive activities have “materially increased” since the outbreak of th.e Korean war. He said his agents fhce new problems, “far more since the Comrnunist pirty has gone underground. The party, he said, has now become a ;shadowy organization with alternate leaders appointed to replace those imprisoned by the government. LEONARD HALL (Continued From Paay [One) the state - lobbying law ini connec-
tion with a building sale fpr\whlch he got an $11,060 fee. Hall's election I was ' assured -when a special subcommittee, appointed to sound out White House and congressional sentiment, re-
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ported Thursday night that b« the “unaninjnous” choice of party leaders. That included Mr. Eisenhowef. senate Republipan leader L’tobert A. Taft and Gov. Thornlas E. Dewey of ??ew York.
