Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 108, Decatur, Adams County, 7 May 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Rev. Emerick To Resign Pastorate Former Local Pastor To Direct Institute The Rev. Samuel Emerick, former pastor of the First Methodist Church here, and now pastor of the Methodist church in Bluffton, announced Sunday that he is resigning his pastorate to become director of the Yokefellow Institute at Richmond. He will also assist Dr. Elton Trueblood. professor of religion at Earlham college. He will start in the new, position June 1. The Yokefellow movement plans J I I I A f FOI YOUR GRADUATE ; A genuine made-by-Kodak camera BROWNIE I OUTFIT jT .2 Kodak reflex camera in a top-value flash outfit low, low price — but this complete outfit features Kodak’s great new Brownie Starflex Camera that takes Ektachrome color slides as well as Kodacolor and black-and-white snapshots. Outfit also includes flasholder, . bulbs, batteries, Verichrome Pan Film, and full instructions. ALL FOR $14.95 i AVAILABLE AT ... EITHER STOR£ HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. —

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retreats and training institutes for i laymen of many denominations. j The term Yokefellow is taken from i the words of Jesus. “Take my yoke ] upon you’’ and the words of Paul, j "My dear yokefellow.” The Yokefellow, Institute is Tb-j cated on the edge of Earlham College campus. It is possible to begin the new program there because of grants from Eli Lilly foundation. Rev. Emerick will also be a member of the general faculty of Earlham college. He will remain a conference member, and will work under special appointment of the bishop. The Emerick family will move to Richmond on the first of June. He served in Bluffton three years. Gasoline Price War On At Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS W — Indianapolis was in the throes of another gasoline price "war*’ today, much to the delight of motorists. One independent station cut the price of regular to 19.9 cents a gallon, 10 cents below the normal price. Most other stations, independent and chain, dropped their prices to 23.9 to 25.9. Trade in a good town — Decatur

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i Supreme Court Puts ! Brake On States | Rules On Test Os Admission To Bar WASHINGTON (UP) — The Supreme Court has put another brake on state powers by ruling out past membership in the Communist Party as a test for admission to a state court bar. Two cases decided Monday from California and New Mexico, dealt with requirements that applicants for the bar prove good moral ‘character. Most states have simlilar rules, carried out by a state board of bar examiners. Justice Hugo L. Black wrote both opinions for the court. Three dissenters called one decision “an unacceptable intrusion into a matter of state concern.” So far this term the court has decided six cases in the everpresent tug-of-war between state versus federal authority. The score is even—3-3. In other actions Monday the court: ' - Ruled 5-4 that the National Labor Relations Board may not decline to assert jurisdiction over labor unions in their capacity as

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

| i employers. The case dealt with 'alleged misconduct of the Interna-1 tional Brotherhood of Teamsters against its own office workers in Portland. Ore. Pavbd the way in a brief order | for the government to take over: an Alexandria, Va., apartment project in a $1,800,000 "windfall profits” case. Reinstated a Los Angeles court order requiring the “Skycoach” air travel system to produce documents at Civil Aeronautics Board hearings. Deny Terre Haute’s Request For Funds State Board Denies Return Os Funds INDIANAPOLIS — W — The State Finance Board Monday refused to return to the city of Terre Haute, $20,000 in withheld state funds. The money was withheld from Terre Haute’s share of alcoholic beverage gallonage tax receipts last July because the city did not repay $20,000 borrowed from the state in 1947. City Attorney Frank P. Crawford of Terre Haute requested that the money be returned last March. He said the note for the loan, which was due in 1952, had been tampered with. But the board denied Terre Haute’s request for return of the money in a unanimous opinion. The board consists of Governor Handley, State Auditor Roy T. Combs and State Treasurer Adolph L. Fossler. In a letter to Crawford, the board said: “We believe that ybur city is 111 advised to attempt-by threat of scandal in alleging fraud that js nonexistent to force the state to reverse an action that is legal, ethical and fair and one that should have been accomplished several years ago.” In other action, the board approved a $25,000 loan to Shelbyville and $19,280 to Jonesboro for planning sewage projects. The board also approved unani' mously a request for $272,500 from the Bureau of Motor Vehicles to begin the compulsory driver reexamination program. Two Girls Killed In Escape Attempt BOSTON (UP) —Two 15-year-old girls fell four stories to tffeir deaths today when they tried to escape from a juvenile detention home by sliding down a drain pipe. ■■ ’• '■ ’ *. ■- . V - -

Pulitzer Prize For United Press Writer Hungarian Revolt Coverage Praised NEW YORK <UP) — United Press start correspondent Russell Jones was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting Monday for ‘ his excellent and sustained coverage of the Hungarian revolt against Communist domination.*’ Jones, the only American newspaperman in Budapest from Nov. 11 until he was expelled Dec. 6. already had received two other awards for his coverage of the Hungarian freedom fight — the George Polk Memorial Award and a Sigma Delta Chi citation for distinguished service in foreign correspondence. The Chicago Daily News won the award for meritorious public service by a newspaper for its exposure of fraud in the office of Illinois State Auditor Orville E. Hodge. The exposure resulted in a jail sentence for Hodge. Wallace Turner and William Lambert of the Portland Oregonian won the prize for distinguished local reporting without pressure of deadline time. They were cited for their exposure of vice and corruption involving Portland municipal officials and officers of the Teamsters Union. Their exposes began an investigation that reached into the top echelon of the Teamsters Unicm and since has moved to Washington. Local Reporting Honor , Hie staff of the Salt Lake City Tribune received the award for local reporting under pressure of edition time for coverage of the collision of two airliners over Grand Canyon. “This was a great team job that surmounted great difficulties in distance, time and terrain,” the citation said. The prize for the best play went posthumously to Eugene O’Neill, the fourth Pulitzer Prize for the dramatist. The latest citation was for “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” now playing in New York. The prize for biography went to Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.) for his book “Profiles In Courage,” a study of political rity using as examples a number of past American politicians. The history prize was awarded to George F. Kennan, former State Department policy adviser, for “Russia Leaves the War.” Kennan now is with the Institute of Advanced Studies at Princeton, N.J. Other prizes included: —James Reston of the New York Times for “distinguished national correspondence ... an outstanding example of which was his five-part analysis of the effect of President Eisenhower’s illness on the function of the executive branch of the government.” Reston won the national affairs reporting award in 1945. —Buford Boone, president and publisher of the Tuscaloosa (Ala,) News for “his fearless and reasoned editorials in a community inflamed by a segregation issue, an outstanding example of his work being the editorial entitled ‘What A Price For Peace,’ published on Feb. 7, 1957.” Cartoon Award —Tom Little of the Nashville Tennessean for his cartoon depicting a boy on crutches and wearing leg braces watching a neighborhood football game. The caption read, "Wonder why my parents didn’t give me Salk shots.” _ —Harry Trask of the Boston STATE POLICE “Inasmuch as safety in traffic is a matter of human.behavior, we will never be able to eliminate the traffic accident completely,” Handley said. “However, since most crashes are a result of human error, we can and must take every possible measure of precaution.” Handley listed as the first point in his program that the commissioner of the Bureau of Motor Vehicles “shall proceed as rapidly as possible to inaugurate and sustain a program of periodic re-ex-amination of all drivers, and in addition, shall continue to maintain tight controls over the issuance and renewal of drivers’ licenses to insure that only qualified pers&s are granted the privilege to drive in Indiana.” ——— The governor ordered the State Highway Commissioners to "stepup their bridge-widening program.” He said widening some bridges in 1956 produced a 50 per cent decrease in rural accidents involving bridge and culvert abutments. More Safety Education “Further, the commissioners have, been instructed to concentrate corrective engineering techniques at high-accident locations and to give continued emphasis to providing more adequate signs, signals and pavement markings,” the governor said. — Handley also asked the state superintendent of public instruction to use ‘to the fullest extent” the newly - created Division of School Traffic Safety Education to provide expanded opportunities for driver education for every‘high school student la? the state. He instructed state'traffic safety director Albert E. Huber and Handley’s administrative assistant, Vernon Anderson, to work closely together to coordinate "the major phases of this program.”

Traveler "for his dramatic and outstanding photographic sequence of the sinking of the liner Andrea Doria.” The prize - winning pictures were taken from a plane flying 75 feet above the water, ; nine minutes before the liner I sank. —Richard Wilbur for his volume of poetry entitled “Things of This World.” Wilbur is associated professor of English at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. —Kenneth Roberts, of Kennebunk. Me., a special award for “his historical novels which have long contributed to the creation of greater interest in our early American history." —Normal) Dello Joio, Wilton, Conn., composer of his “Meditations On Ecclesiastes,” first performed at the New York School of Music in April of last year. Dello Joio was the composer of “The Trjal At Rouen.” an opera about Joan of Arc performed over NBC-TV last April 8. Trading Stamps Are Defended By Experts Deny Stamps Bring Food Price Increase BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UP) - Two Indiana University marketing experts today came to the defense of trading stamps in a controversy over whether they raise the price of food. “Use of trading stamps does■ not raise food prices,” said Profs. Albert Haring and Wallace O. Yoder of the I. U. School of Business. They said in a report released > that they conducted a special. study of recent Bureau of Labor' Statistics data. They said the study does “not permit aay inference in support of the hypothesis that trading stamps raise food prices.” . The professors took cost data from the BLS for cities where no stamps are used. In the Midwest, they compared Chicago, where no stamps are used, with Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Houston, Kansas City, Minneapolis and St. Louis. In the East, they compared Washington, a non-stamp city, with Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Scranton. In the West it was non-stamp Seattle against Los Angeles, Portland and San Francisco. The report was described as an "interim” report. It delved into the effect of trading stamps on both customer and retail business. Haring and Yoder said the trading stamps have resulted in a "re - sharpening of competitive tools” and that when they are used “in the right situation are probably the most powerful single promotional tool yet developed for getting and holding customers.” Indiana Farm Bureau Officer Dies Monday FRANKLIN (UP) — Mrs. Paul Flinn, Franklin, second vice president of the Indiana Farm Bureau and director of the organization's activities for women, died Monday in Johnson County Hospital. Mrs. Flinn was elected to the state post in 1954.

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TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1957