Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 90, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1956 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
MASONIC Entered Apprentice Dejfree Tuesday, April 17th 7:30 pari. m > S Weldon Buw<erdner. W. M.
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BTo Increase Charge For Home Residents The county comuaiwloaers durin< their retuiar jniwo this nioruI Ini «t the county court house decld i rd to charge residents of the coun|tj- home who are receiving social security payments |S2.stt for board h’p t<» now charges vary most j are about ISO with townships mak- ( I Ing up the balance: fhti neW charge 1 is tor those who have social secur | ity or gome other means of paying. _. ■• R|.»,»■■<■■. ■..11l nm> .-lit lIU. -■T. I■■ r-T-
Methodist General Conclave April 25 - Quadrennial Meet At Minneapolis Twenty-two HooMer delegates are preparing to .attend one of the »ountry's oldest legislative bodies, the general conference ot the Methodist church. It wilt open ith quadrennial sessions, in Minneapolis, Minn. April 25 with delegates from around the world in attendance. • • - Plenary sessions will be held in Municipal Auditorium. Adjournment is tentatively set for May 9, pending completion of the legislative docket. The conference dates back to as the denomination’s supreme law and policy-making body. Previously 1 * the work in America was a colonial enterprise of British Methodism? Voting members will number 786 ministerial and lay delegates, equally divided, it was annonnyed by the conlerence secretary, the Iler. Dr. Lud H. Estes. Memphis. JTenn. the group" wifi Include 81 ’women and 72 representatives of connections. Delegates wdre, elected by regional conferences to represent 9,313.878 members of the Methodist church in the United States and its_ territories, and more thati 600.ftiO in other countries, these figures do not include approximately 2.000,000 preparatory members. At lean 25 countries will be represented by delegates or fraternal messengers. Dr. ‘Estes said. Non-voting groups will include 75 bighops. the nine-member Judicial Council or ‘‘supreme court’' which interprets church' law t executives of administrative boards and agencies who will serve as consultants, and spokesmen for other denominations and the National and World Councils of Churches. • ■ I Bishops preside over plenary ses- ; sions hut have no vote or Voice
TBS DBCATUB DAILY DBMOCTUT, DMCATUB, DnHANA
except In the traditional epfacßpal address, a collective utterance on the "»Ute of thn church." Signed by all the biehope, the lengthy doc mnent will be read on the first ! evening by Bishop Fred Fierce Corson of Philadelphia. Delegates will review and plan the general work of the church, and consider a record number of or petitions for specific legislative action. More than 3.000 memorials have been filed for reference to 16 committees. Dr. Estes said. They range frolm minor changes in church law to such controversial issues as racial segregation and full clergy rights for women preachers. The issue of racial segregation is exported to provoke considerable debate on the conference floor. Dr,. Estes said that more than 100 memorials relate to proposals to abolish or retain the church's segregated <*entral jurisdiction, composed of 360,000 Negroes. The conference will also act up-, on proposals to increase support of the church’s several missionary, educational and philanthropic agencies for which a total of $56,744,000 was raised last year. Spatial legislation will lie reqSeated for: a , ■ I. A four-year program to strengthen Methodist educational institutions and local churches, in- < hiding $37.00’0,(100 to be faised for ’ 116 church-related colleges and universities' 1 2. Authorization of two new seminaries, expansion—of the ' Church’s 10 present seminaries, and a recruitment campaign to help overcome a shortage of train- ' ed ministers. 3. Allocation ot $1,000,000 to establish a School of Internation- ‘ al Service at American University ; In Washington. D. C„ a Methodist institution, as a Protestant training center for students in govern- ’ ment and industrial foreign serv- ’ ice. Chicago — Railroads in the U.S. use about 130 million rail ties every year, enough to build 43,000 s miles of. track.
Nine Students Os County In Finals Compete April 28 For State Finals Nine students from Adams county will be entered in the finals of the annual state high school contests at Indiana University Saturday, April 28, Participating in the finals will be 1110 high school students, all winners of regional meets held throughout the state March 24. The competition will be in mathematics, English, Latin and Spanish. The largest number of students, 518, will compete in the mathematics contest. There will be 233 in the English contest. 240 in the Latin contest and HH in the Spanish contest. Examinations will begin at 8:30 n. m. There will be meetings for teachers during the morning and group luncheons and entertainment for students and teachers nt noon. L The winners will be announced umd medals awarded following a musical program in the auditorium at 3 p. m. 7 Contestants arriving Friday will be entertained with a party that evening in the Student building. Adams county students who will compete in the contest finals include: Berne-French township— Ruth Zimmerman, English} Adams Central — Barbara’-Ann Fiechter, English, and Winsfpn Lister, geometry: Monmouth — Barbara Carr and Shirley Bleeke, English; Robert Bcineke and Donald A. Fuelling, algebra. Clinton Fuelling and David A. Beery, comprehensive mathematics. Combs Is In Race For State Auditor INDIANAPOLIS (INS-) —Marion county auditor Roy T- Combs, of Indianapolis, is in the race for the Republican nomination for state auditor today. Combs is treasurer of the Indiana Christian Missionary association and a director of the board of Week-day religious education. He is regarded as a national authority on real estate reassessment. Young Indianapolis Woman Is Missing INDIANAPOLIS (INS) —Police searched today for Nancy Annie Leavell. IS, who was last seen when she stepped info an automobile driven by an unknown man late Tuesday. She was carrying two traveling bags, according to a neighbor. Police said they feared foul play because she had been keeping company with a man who had beaten ■her several times.
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Production Os Small Nuclear Weapons Urged Murray Declares Small Weapons To Increase Security NEW YORK (INS) -r Atomic energy commissioner Thomas E. Murray declared today production of many more small, rather than even larger, nuclear weapons would greatly “strengthen our national security.” He said a “moral and rational” four-point program which he outlined before a senate subcommittee also would steer America clear of a possibly disastrous “nuclear Maginot line.” The silver « haired, dissenting member of the AEC. in ap exclusive interview with International Newk Service called for an absolutely non-political “national nuclear policy;” He said this policy was “urgently needed” and. “must be based on all the facts about nuclear weapons — our need of them, their usefulness, and the daiigers connected with their misuse." The veteran AEC members stated: “We must avoid the idea of two extremes, an uneasy co-exist-ence on the one hand and all out nuclear w-ar on the other. “This mentality betrays a bankruptcy .both of sound military thinking and of moral principle. We need an ever increasing stockpile of small weapons capable of taking care of all the emergencies between these two extremes." Such a balanced stockpiling, he said, “would eventually give us the flexible strength needed to fight any kind of a war.” Murray proposed before the disarmament subcommittee of the senate foreign relations commitTee that the U.S. set a limit on the size and on the number of huge multimegaton hydrogen bombs, end tests of the biggest new thermonuclear weapons and step up the rate of production, of small tactical weapons. He noted that beyond a certain point, bigger bombs have “dubious” wartime practicality, their use would run counter to limitations of moral law their production may build a “nuclear maginot line" rather than a “balanced stackpiling with the future major emphasis on smaller nuclear weapotis.” Following are questions asked Murray and his answers: Q. Is it true, as one critic stated, that you believe we have enough hydrogen bombs? A. 4 have made it clear that I think just the opposite. I hold that
it will not be possible, as baa been suggested at disarmament conferencas in London, to restrict the future use of all new fissionable material to peacetmie use. A continued* flow of fissionable material must go into weapons for some time. 1. Do you believe we should stop making bigger nuclear weapons ? . A. I do not, except that we should not make weapons any higher than we een or will possibly use. We should never stockpile a weapon that we do intend to nse. If we did. we would build a false sense of security. I am tn agreement with President Eisenhower, who said on March 12: “While I have been told many times that there is no theoretical
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limit to the else of these Instruments (H-bombs) which can b« made, there Is, 1 think, a practical limit, as long as you are thinking of using it only against someone else, and there Is. size of targets.’’ There is no technical limit to t how big you can make a bomb. Therefore, as rational human beings, we should set a limit to their size, based on military usefulness and moral principle. The use of"’ force In warfare is subject to the .' dictates of the moral conscience. " Washington — Six states—M»ryland. Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia and West Vir-ginia-derived their names from xformer British rulers. .’ ed automobile, highway to eastern -.!
