Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 102, Decatur, Adams County, 30 April 1957 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Scientist Warns On Tests Os H-Bombs Radioactive Fallout Hazards Are Cited CHICAGO (UP) — Radioactive fallout from Britain’s Christmas island H-bomb tests would cause some 1,000 fatal cases of leukemia around the world, Nobel Prizewinning chemist Dr. Linus Pauling said Monday night. And if a ban is not placed on all hydrogen weapons tests, Pauling said, the coming generation can expect to give birth to an additional 290.000 feeble-minded children. "That may not sound like a large

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percentage of all the children In the world,” Pauling said, “but from a humanitarian standpoint it is a very great number.” The famed bio - chemist, who holds honorary doctorate degrees from 13 universities and the presidential medal of merit for outstanding service, said he was certain the human race ’’could not survive” an all-out hydrogen war “and still remain the human race." Pauling made his remarks at the end of a technical address before the Chicago section of the American Chemical Society, Pauling later told United Press that in addition to his leukemia estimate, he had been told British scientists themselves predicted the Christmas Island tests would cause about 20,000 cases of bone cancer around the world.

"I realize the hydrogen bomb test question is a political issue and 1 am a scientist,” Pauling told United Press, “but even from a political viewpoint I think the < tests should be stopped—or at least world regulated.” Says Uniled Slates Could Defeat Russia Secretary Os Army Says Nation Beady • WASHINGTON (UP) — Army Secretary Wilbur M. Brucker said Monday night the United States could “most certainly” defeat Russia in any all-out war. He also said, “There is no question about the fact that nuclear weapons will be used whenever it is necessary.” However, he said nuclear weapons "big or little” would be used (“under the orders only of the 1 President.” I Brucker said on the television program (ABC) “Press Conference” that the United States is “on the alert and watching and awaiting for whatever develops” in the Middle East. He declined to comment on whether any new orders have been issued to U.S. armed forces since jthe current crisis erupted in Jordan. But he said that if needed the United States could move troops into Jordan in a “matter of days—not weeks or months.” He refused to comment on the number of troops that could be moved into the turbulent Middle East in an but, he said, “We have, enough to meet the emergency.” Asked if he thought President Eisenhower was ready to invoke his Middle East doctrine to deter Communist aggression, Brucker replied, “Emphatically, yes.” He said the United States is ready to fight a big or little war. But one doesn’t know about the probability of an all-out war, he saidHe said such a war “could more likely start from a little.war that began to blaze and grew from there.”

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Teamsters Board To Meet On Beck Case Board's Objections Rebuffed By Meany WASHINGTON Union leaders indicated today they may have a second thought about their objections to AFL-CIO action against the union and Teamster President Dave Beck. Beck and five vice presidents decided late Monday to call the union’s 13-member executive board to a meeting here “within a week or 10 days.” Tbe decision was made at a four-hour meeting at which they discussed AFL - CIO President George Meany’s rebuff of the objections raised by the Teamsters executive board in mid-April. Meany Monday: —Again rejected the charge that the March 29 suspension of Beck as an AFL-CIO vice president was unconstitutional. —Declared the AFL-CIO investigation of the union on corruption charges will proceed whether or not the union attends a hearing to be held next Monday. Informed sources have said that Teamster leaders wil’ sot snub the May 6 hearing- offer despite the objections of the Teamster executive board to the procedures of the investigation. The new .executive board meet-

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ing could bring the leaders here in time for the hearing. The meeting Monday was held by the' five-man Teamster committee appointed by Beck to discuss with the AFLCIO his suspension as an AFL-CIO officer. Meany turned down the request to appoint a committee to meet with the Teamster group. He said he would refer the request to the 1 AFL-CIO executive council on May 20. The council has requested Beck “ to appear on that date on charges 1 [that he has “brought the labor movement into disrepute.” The charges are based on his ■ use of the Fifth Amendment to J avoid answering Senate Rackets 1 Committee accusations that he : took $320,000 in union funds for his personal use and on his own 1 admission that he “borrowed” be- ’ tween $300,000 and $400,000 of union F money without interest. 1 NAVY t HnnH- t rroir -»<« nn«> t to work that-way, with a union ; account taking' notes on everything the investigators found. Adelstein persisted in refusing to turn over his records, howev- ' er, and McClellan told reporters . if the refusal stands “I will bring it before the committee for appropriate action.” He said that could E include a contempt citation. !*. . • 1 Until 1920, the College of the I Ozarks at Clarksville, Ark., was known as Arkansas Cumberland ■ College.

INDIANA -

Dag Hammarskjold Confers With Pope Threat Os War In Mid-East Discussed ROME, (UP) — United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold discussed the threat of war in the Middle East with Pope Pius XII today in a 45-minute private papal audience. The' audlfehce 'Wi one of the longest the Pope has accorded a visiting dignitary in recent years. The 81-year-old Pontiff and the U.N. secretary-general talked behind closed doors. such audiences last about 20 minutes. Hammarskjold, on his way to Geneva, Switzerland, to attend meetings of several U.N. agencies, made a special detour here to talk with Pope Pius. Just over a year ago, on April 9, 1956, Hammarskjold paid his first visit to the Pope. At that time he was on an urgent trip to the Middle East in a successful effort to halt increasing raids along 1 the Israeli-Jordan border. 1 Besides the Middle East situation, Hammarskjold talked with the Pope today about progress of the world's search for away that will lead to nuclear disarmament. Trade In a cood town — Decatar

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