Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 227, Decatur, Adams County, 27 September 1955 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Ag Department Revises Its Security Plan Benson Testifies To Investigators Os Lade jinsky Case WASHINGTON (INS) — Agriculture secretary Etra Taft Benson testified today he has revised his department's personnel security program as a' result of the Wolf Ladejinsky case. Benson told a senate civil service subcommittee headed by Sen. Olin Johnston (D-S. C.) that doubts as to the loyalty of any employe still are resolved in favor of “the safety of the many.” said he is "sure we have made mistakes in handling our seTEE P L E MOVING & TRUCKING ~ Local and Long Distance PHONE 3-2607

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carity program but tftay were honest and conaeienUous mlatates." Benson defended the etenderda ter judging an employe’a loyalty as “right" The secretary acknowledged he was disturbed by the furor over Ladejinsky, the land reform expert fired by Benson as a security risk although he previously had been cleared by the state department. Ladejinsky later was hired by the foreign operations administration. The committee called Benson to find out why an employe could be considered a security risk by one agency and cleared by two others. Benson has now removed the security - risk label against Ladejinsky. | Benson said the most important change he made in his security program was the establishment of a security committee “at the top management level.” He said this unit reviews all adverse security action in the department, including recommendations for suspension or dismissal. Benson said he meets with the committee and the security officer on a dismissal case before final action is taken. Meanwhile, Sen. Frank Carlson (R-JCan.) blasted as “unfair and unwarranted” a Democratic charge that President Eisenhower joined in a “numbers game” involving security risk firings.

HD if'- W~ ’ W —”"W rTr W swZ" 9 ™ "Eii **»• 'wb la ■ j h> Rkf. S 5 • ■ WL''V !* I W- iFwS■. v• F J "■ ■ I < I*f 1 ■ 4 ■ ' 1 ' 'jKST " fl r Vi '** f • F' ■!' ' ’'"' ' J ’Lr-y b? *nwWirr Fl I wX-- -j Ofc ~ rarest. "■' '/ nTflBBl T- 'OWr -Ir I' *£*>-»• *. M-A--. \ *• ** *" -. ’<?JH » ~mS * ft** F.™* <. .........it _ P~ AtWI tv*. THE ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION reveals in Washington that it haa a hitherto secret base for testing the Ruling characteristics of various atomic bombs in Salton Sea, Calif. Thia building is the main instrumentation laboratory. In the foreground is a device called APOTA (automatic! positioning of telemetering antenna). It assures maximum reception from transmitters in dummy bombs which gives vital information on behavior of the bombs as they fall earthward. (International Soundphoto J

The charge against the President was flung emotionally Monday by Sen. Matthew W. Neely (D-W. Va.) at the hearing. Neely charged that Republicans have been using figures on security ousters “extravagantly and unjustly, including the President and particularly Mr. Dewey." Civil service commission chairman Philip Young, Jn a new report, listed the number of security risks who have been fired or who resigned since Mr. Eisenhower took office at 9,310.5. Os these, he said 3,614 were fired and 5,696 had resigned while

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

charges were pending against them. Included in .ne tirings »ere 437 in the air force. 435 in the army, 735 in the navy, 188 in the foreign aid program and 59 in the justice department. j I Neely's accusation was made after committee counsel Henry Edens and Paul Hadlick, his assistant,. referred to what they termed “padding” of figures on security dismissals for political ■ purposes. They quoted 1954 election year statements of Mr. Eisenhower and ex-Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York.

Nation's Heaviest Twins Bam Monday PHILADELPHIA (INS) —A set of twins, reportedly the heaviest ever known to be registered in this, country, were born Monday at St. Agnes Hospital in south Philadelphia. Doctors said the twins are healthy, normal girls. One weighed nine pounds two ounces while the other tipped the scales at eight pounds twelve ounces. The girls' mother Is 33 year-old Mrs. Margaret Margavitch. Her husband, Bruce, is an accountant tor a grocery chain.

Ministers Os Big Four To Meet Tonight Dulles Dinner Host To Other Ministers Os Big Four Powers - NEW YORK (IN8) — The Bin Four foreign ministers will hold an informal "dinner conference" on Germany and disarmament today in preparation for their Geneva meeting Oct. 27. Secretary of state John Foster Dulles invited Soviet foreign minister V. M. Molotov to be his guest thia evening at dinner along with British foreign secretary Harold MacMillan and French foreign minister Antoine Pinay. The dinner, while primarily staged as a social occasion, will give Molotov an opportunity to exchange preliminary* viewpoints with the three western policy shapers on the three point agenda outlined for Geneva by the "summit” talks of last July. The Western group, which will be feted at dinner by Molotov Thursday, was canvassing the best method of “approach” and tactics for the Geneva conference. The meeting in the Swiss city was set up by the four chiefs of government at their July “summit" talks in the hope of paving the way for a solution of major cold war problems. The three western statesmen had before them for discussion the following three-point Geneva agenda: 1. German reunification and European security. 2. Disarmament, including President Eisenhower's “open skies” plan for the exchange of military data and aerial surveys. 3. Improvement of East-West relations. ** At Geneva last July, the four chiefs of government decided to combine the question of reunifying Germany with that of security in Europe. The two problems were considered inseparable, since a reunited German nation is deffiied to hold the key to security in Europe. In view of this tremendous question for the Geneva conference, the western foreign ministers will closet themselves Wednesday with foreign minister Henrich Von Brentano of the Federal German Republic. He wMI report to them on the Moscow conference which chancellor Konrad Adenauer had on reunification with Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin. . .

Many Teachers Quit Indiana Positions Continued Shortage Predicted By Young INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Superintendent of public instruction Wilbur Young reported today that more than 3,500 teachers left their jobs in Indiana public schools last year. Approximately 1,500 took positions in other schools of the state, but the remaining 2,000 are not teaching in Indiana this year. Os the 2,000, 32 per cent returned to full time homemaking. 21.5 per cent accepted teaching positions in other states, 13.5 per cent entered other professions, 11.5 per cent retired. 3.8 per cent entered higher institutions of learning, 3.2 per cent resigned because of ill health, 2.5 per cent entered the armed forces, 1.2 per cent died, and 10.8 per cent quit teaching for miscellaneous reasons. Young said: “We simply must slow down this departure of qualified teachers, while at the same time we must recruit and prepare new teachers, Babies now born are in such- record - breaking numbers that the shortage will remain with us until more teachers are provided. Taxes can build more classrooms, but only individuals, by their own decision. can become teachers." To Vote Dec. 16 INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Indiana’s 30,000 public school teachers will vote Dec. 16 for or against integrating their state pension system with social security. Last month, state employes voted overwhelmingly for the merger. There is division in the highest ranks of teacherdom on the issue, however. Indiana state teachers’ \ association executive secretary Ro'jjert 11. Wyatt was reported in favor of the merger while state, public instruction superintendent Wilbur Young was reported opposed. The two men were conducting question and answer clinics in the state on the subject. Teachers now members of the retirement fund and working in the profession may vote "at ballot boxes in the individual schools. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat i Want Ad. It brlngj results. »

Curator Asks Aid On Museum Figures Seeks Nominations To Santa Claus Hall SANTA CLAUS, Ind. (INS) — A dilemma born of a need for delineation faces pretty Helen Koch Robb today. Mrs. Robb's trouble is too many famous Americans. She is curator of a museum at Santa Claus, Ind., which now contains 26 famous Americans. and it's up to her to pick out the new additions to be made to the life sise wax figures. Some of the figures already in the hall represent history, some sports, industry, theater, and poetry. Boih* are fact and some are fiction. No specific rules were laid down when the museum first was started. Now the field is so wide that Mrs. Robb can’t figure out who should bo next nominated to the museum. She and her family Vtad selected the first figures to be created by Lewis Sorensen, California wax artist, but now they are stymied. Today, Mrs. Robb appealed to newspaper readers and radio and television listeners to send their suggestions for the next addition to the Santa Claus hall of famous Americans. The personages getting the most nominations will be selected for inclusion in the ranks which partially till the building. Already in the museum, and therefore not eligible for nomination are some of the most obvious choices for a midwest museum. Abraham Lincoln rates three models. since this is Lincoln country where the Civil War president lived as a boy. Abe at the age of eight, with his mother, Nancy Hanks Lincoln, is shown in the first of the Lincoln trio. Lincoln's mother is buried only a short distance from Santa Claus. Os course, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson already represented in the museum, as Is Benjamin Franklin and Betsy Ross. Eli Whitney. Thomas Edison and Henry Ford already are depicted as a trio of important inventors who contributed so much to American progress. Already in the museum are Stephen Foster and Lilliam Russell. Mark Twain, or Samuel Clemens, along with three of his creations — Tom Sawyer, Becky Thatcher and Huckleberry Finn, are depicted. Fiction is renresented again with the familiar figures of “The Little Women"' — Mrs. March and her daughters, Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy. James Whitcomb Riley inhabits this museum, too, as befits a Hoosier establishment Will Rogers also is included, and so is Babe Ruth. Which leaves Mrs. Robb with a problem — who next after this wide variety? Don’t suggest Santa Claus, for one of the world’s biggest statues of this obvious selection already stands outside the museum, but anybody else's favorite “Famous American” can be nominated for, entry in the collection by a* postcerd 10-Mrs. Robb at Santa Claus, Ind. The wax figures cost the museum from SSOO to S9OO, each, so the puezled curator wants to be sure she's picking a national winner. District Meeting Os Co-ops Held Monday Special feed programs stressing the use of more corn on livestock and poultry rations were given Farm Bureau Co-op employes in a district meeting at Wabash Monday. Forest X-Tucker, Adams county co-op manager, says the feed programs were especially developed to help farmers make more profit from their big corn crop by feeding it to produce meat, milk and eggs more economically. Coop employes attending with Tucker were Art Raudenbush, Junior Nussbaum. > Wilmer Bultemeier, Rex Raudenbush, Reuben Buevcher, Ed Gerber and L. E. Arciibold.-

■■ Only way to safeguard your health . „ See your physician whenr Illness strikes, then bring his Prescription in to us, where Experienced hands .will quickly compound it.

TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 27, 1966

Army Helicopter To Land Here Thursday Sgt. W. L Brewuer, of the Fort Wayne army recruiting station, completed an-angetuents today for the landing in Decatur of a ne'w army helicopter at Worthman field Thursday afternoon. The landing will be made at 3 o’clock. Purpose of bringing the new model plane to Decatur la to create interest in army enlistments. Army officials will be on hand to explain the new system of enlistment for young men between the ages of 17 years and 18% years. They now can take six months of active duty and then serve the balance of their enlistment in the army reserve. Circulars explaining the new system will be distributed to interested young men and their parents. The public is invited to witness the landing and take-off of the new helicopter. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

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