Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 247, Decatur, Adams County, 20 October 1953 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
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THfi DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
May Cut Down On America's Europe Force Considers Return Os One Or More Divisions To U. S. WASHINGTON UP — The defense department is considering bringing home one or more of the six U. S. army divisions now stationed In Western Europe. High officials said today no firm plans have been made. The’ final decision will be up to President Efsenhdwer and the national curlty council. | .. As supreme commander of the North Atlantic treaty organization forces before he was elected president, Mr. Eisenhower urged the deployment of a strong U. S. ground force in Europe, which he described as the front line of resistance td Communist aggression. The troop commitment was made in 1950 aftef a “great debate’* in congress in which the late Sfn. Robert A. Taft led forces opposed to it. The military argument for withdrawing some U. S. troops is that the need for American infantrymen has been reduced in the past two years by development of new .weapons, such as the atomic cannons recently sent to Western Europe.The diplomatic argument against ,the move is that it might play hob with U. S. efforts to persuade Euro►pean allies to increase their own military contributions to NATO. , Both points of view doubtless will receive a thorough airing in the national security Council I which is composed of top military and diplomatic, officials and which was created for the precise purpose of viewing strategic plans from all angles. \ A meeting of the North Atlantic -treaty council, top planning body of NATO, is tentatively scheduled for December. Any plan to reduce U. S. ground troop strength in Europe probably would be made known at that time. Defense secretary Charles E. Wilson gave a clue to current military thinking on the subject at a news conference Monday. He said new weapons should permit a “sub* stantial reduction” of American troops stationed in Europe. Any such cutback, hej said, would not be immediate but rather over “a reasonable period of time.” Wilson said |the “important thing” is not how many troops the United States has stationed in Europe but rather that “we are committed ahead of time” to go to the defense of Western Europe in event of wan V ■ Sudduth Funeral To Be Held Wednesday Funeral services for Jerry Allen Sudduth, five-month-old son of-Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sudduth, who died Sunday, will be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday at the Black funeral home and at 2 p. m. at the Church tff the Nazarene. The name of Harvey Stetzel. Decatur, a greatgrandfather, was unintentionally omitted from the list of survivors. Decatur, Student In Notre Dame Chorus Joseph Costello, sou of Mr. and ■Mrs. Francis Costello of this city and a freshman at the University at Notre Dame has been named a member of the Notre Dame glee club, it was learned today. Joe is a graduate of Decatur 'Catholic high school in the class dt IS'Sa and a former newspaper carrier for the Daily Democrat. Monmouth School Bond Names Officers New officers of the Monmouth high school band, elected at a recent meeting of the musical organization., are: June Harvey, president; Arno Girod, vice president; Betty floe, secretary; Dorothy Fast, treasurer; Katy Singleton, news reporter.
/SMt Hk TOgf T” . W J W y jag v .' ?*WM K-. <\ wHh &>«■ 1 MAMEb new Director of Women's I AcfHftirt of the Democratic National Committee. Mrs. Katie Louchhefm (above), Os Washington, D.C., succeeds Mrs. India Edwards, who is moving from the capital. (International*
PINNSY'S WAfHINbTOH RYlt locomotive lies on Ita side and ears are derailed helter-skelter along the tracks on outskirts of Baltimore. The engineer, who leaped clear with the treman when the locomotive toppled, said the wreck occurred when he slammed on brakes to avoid striking a metal easting on the tracks. Ten persons were injured tn the pileup. f international BoundpKoto)
Supersonic Planes Off Secret Lists First Supersonic Combat Planes Made LOS ANGELES, Calif. (UP) -rThe first supersonic combat planes in history, believed capable of speeds approaching 800 miles an hour, were removed from the secret list today as they began to roll from the assembly line. The new FIOO Su-per Sabres were considered by air officers to give the United States a commanding lead in the global race (or jet supremacy. The air force guardedly revealed details of the spectacular performance when the No. 1 production model was wheeled from the factory of North American Aviation, builder of the FB6 sabre of Korean War famA It wad disclosed that the test model, the YPIOO, exceeded the speed of sound in level flight during its first turn in the air last May 25 with North American test pilot George Welch at the controls. A more streamlined fighter than the Sabre, the FIOO can fight at high speed at altitudes above 50,000 feet, which means it can take on the most advanced bombers of which there is public knowledge. It was expected that Super Sabres would be assigned to air force units in Europe and the Far East, where they would have an apparently unquestionable margin of superiority over any known Russian fighter or bomber development. They also can be adapted to carry rockets and bombs in support of ground troops, .it was 'announced. Carpenters Union leader Dies Today Big Bill Hutcheson Dies At Indianapolis ?N)DT ANA POLIS UP — William L. (’Big Bill) Hutcheson, 79. powerful eX-preSidenrt of the 800,0') )- member AFL Carpenters’ Union, died today. \ Hutcheson, who took commana dt the Carpenters in J 19>1<5 and remained president until 1951, was stricken Thursday , in Methodist hospital. He had been fltfwn theie three days earlier from his Wisconsin hunting lodee, suffering from a stomach ailment. Hutcheson was a Michigan farm boy who started carpentering ‘t 20 cents an hour. Hie footballplayer build and his determined spirit early won him the nickname “Big Bill.” His career was marked by physical and verbal attacks—-including a poke on the jaw by John L Lewis during an AFL convention. Btrt nothing deterred Hutcheson from his policy of keeping all carpentry work, from rutting dow t giant redwood treks to sandpapering chairs, for meznbers of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners. Hutcheson was succeeded as president by his Son. Maurice. "Big Bill” was a patent fact 'r in internal affairs of the AFL and the Republican pUrty. In 1944 ♦ wes mentioned as a possible GOP vice presidential candidate. But ‘ he,l*ter cooled toward the party partly because of the Taft-Hartle.’ law. Ih IDTS, Hutcheson was ons oi only two Hoosier delegates to the Republican national convention •> support Dwight EiJcnhower for the presidential nomination. Hutcheson considered industrial; unionization, such as in the CIO his group’s greatest threat, fte 1 never hesitated to become etcbroiled tn a jurisdictional batUe Hutcheson,'son of a Scotch ship's 1 carpenter, was born in Saginaw. I Mich., Feb. 7. 1874. Trade in a Good To*u — Decatur 1
Notre Dame Reports Record Enrollment SOUTH BEND, UP — Notre Dame University today reported a fall enrollment of 5,401 students, an increase of more than 200 over the last school year and the largest tn its 112-year history. Included are 1,<20 freshmen and .389 graduate students. Every state in the union and more than 30 foreign* countries are represented at the university. Steel Workers To Seek Annual Wage Policy Committee Meets Wednesday NSW YORK U<P — The CIO United Steelworkers union’s wage polie> committee meets her-» Wednesday to map strategy for an expected all-out demand next year for a guaranteed annual wage in the industry. The .powerful 170-TYwm policy group will confer for two days to agree upon their tactics when contract negotiations are opened next spring with U. 8. Steel, Bethlehem Steel, Republic Steel and other behembths of the industry. The steel industry's total employmerrt as of last August was 095,809. and of this number approximately 580,000 are wage earners of a clasA subject to unionization, according to the American Iron and Steel Institute. About 90 per cent of the 586,000 are unionized, the institute said. TGW secretary-treasurer I. W. Abel announced recently that the demand for a guaranteed wage clause would be a major one next year because production cutback’ have caused increasing layoffs in the industry. He said thpt 8 per cent of 2,330 I"SW contracts naw have the guaranteed wage clause, and it is the intention of the union to extend the coverage) to all. Union sources said the commit tee’s plan calls for the employer to set up a trust fund amounting to I(Twents per man hour. Out of this the worker dropped from *he payroll Would receive a percentage of his weekly pay for 52 weeks. Payments to a laid-off worker w’ould be reduced by the anioun* of unemployment compensation ae receives from the state. The guaranteed annual wage is not expected to be the only demand the union will seek next spring. Improved retirement pensions, better hospital, medical and dental benefits, and direct wage increases also Will be sought, according to union sources. David J. McDonald, president ot the |steelworkers’ union, already
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1953
Hits Disclosures Os Weapons Secrets Warning Issued By Dr. Vannevar Bush NEW YORK DP — Dr. Vannevar Bush, wartime hea3 of the nation’s top weapons and warfare research office, warned Monday night against further disclosure of technical information about the United States’ new weapons, ing that the government had * r told too much” already. Bush said the government had “erred gravely in the past” through its disclosures which “will probably cost us dear.” He said highlevel military planning must be done in secret without guidance by the “horseback opinions of columnist*’ ’or special intgrest groups. Bush, former head of the office of scientific 'research apd development, spoke before a banquet of the American institute of consulting engineers which presented him with the second merit award in its 4-year history. He said he believed the nation's rapid development oi an atomic stockpile was sound policy. However, Bush said it would ue /fatal 1, for the United States :o face the future with the feeling that winning the arms race will insure security. •He pointed out that the nation is in no position to stop a surprise atomic attack, although he said an effective defense system could b J devised. "We are obviously just about at the limit of expenditure tn this country for military purposes, an •. yet there appear to Ixj serious gaps in our military program/' Bush said. : ’ . The scientist urged congress to review-' all defense planning carefully “to be especially sure we are not pouring money down ratholes ” He said the review should be made without "the ballyhoo that often attends congressional investigations.” has announced the organization will seek a social insurance program covering life insurance, hospitalization and other benefits, financed by 5-cents hourly contributions, half from the company and half from the employes. The American Iron & Steel Institute t reported that the steel* workers’ averatge hourly earnings hit a new all-time high In August of >2.318. greater by >1.061 than the average for the full year of 1945. The Institute estimated the industry’s total payroll in August at The payroll for the first eight months of 1953 exceeded >2,200,000,000, the institute said.
