Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 109, Decatur, Adams County, 8 May 1957 — Page 10

PAGE TWO-A

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Ball Stale Graduate Ceremonies June 4 Eight From County To Recede Degrees Parading graduates at Ball State Teachers College will set an all-time record for thenumber of degree winners at the college. The record breaking class will include 750 seniors earning bachelor’s degrees and 300 graduate students earning master's degrees. Thirty-four students will be granted three year certificates for completion of the nursing curricula operated jointly by Ball State Teachers College and Ball memorial hospital. Participating in the commencement exercises June 4 will be 1.075 students. Other students will complete preprofessional programs in medicine, medical technology, dentistry, law and secretarial study. Commencement activities for 1957 listed by the college’s convocation committee include a senior convocation May 22 at 10 a.m. in the assembly hall; a reception for 1957 graduates at the home of President and Mrs. John R. Emens Wednesday, May 22 from 2 to 5 pin.; an alumni senior Saturday, May 25, at 6 p.m, in the college student center ballroom to be followed by an alumni senior dance; baccalaureate services on the south terrace of the arts building an June 2 at 5 p.m.; a ceremony granting commissions as second lieutenants to seniors completing the Ball State air force reserve officers training program at 3 p.m. June 4 in the recital hall of the arts building; a concert by the State commencement band on the south terrace of the arts building June 4 at 4 p.m.; and the commencement ceremony itself also on the south terrace of die arts building June 4 at 5 p.m. Dr. Harlan Hatcher, president

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA "

TT i A' < ' • -- B| A « ■ I I Sy ._ DAVID ALBERSON, farmer who planned the collection ditch and pumping station to drain his 30 acre low field, stands on the pipe which leads from the pump to the collection tank. The water enters the 400 feet of tile from this tank, which slows the flow down and allows it to enter the tile at a normal rate.—(Staff Photo)

of the University of Michigan, will deliver the commencement address entitled, ’’The Little More And How Much It Is” while Dr. W. B. Blakemore, dean of the Disciple's Divinity House of the University of Chicago, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon

entitled. “Will America Outgrow Her Greatness.” The outdoor commencement events will be moverd to indoor auditoriums in case of inclement weather. Among the 1,075 persons participating in the commencement ex-

ercises will be: Decatur: Fern Miller Freeland, Vera M. Owens and Dorothy L. West, master of arts degree; and Robert Eugene Drew, bachelor of science degree. Berne: Lamar Geyer, Jr., and Velma Ilene Reef, master of arts in education; Eloise Chrusty Letstner and Jerry Lee Sprunger, bachelor of science in education. Alger Hiss' Story Os Case Published Hiss Reasserts His Innocence In Bobk NEW YORK (UP) — Alger Hiss’ own story of his trial and connection is published today in a book which charges he was denied a fair trial from the moment of his first appearance before a congressional committee through his final judgment by the Court of Appeals. The book, "In the Court of Public Opinion,’• reasserts Hiss’ innocence both of Communist spy charges and- of the perjury in denying them, for which he spent three years and eight months in federal prison. It is a step-by-step recounting of the case which began with charges against him by confessed spy Whittaker Chambers in 1948 and ended with the denial of his last appeal for a new trial 19 months before he was released from'prison. “I am confident now, as I have always been, of eventual vindication,” Hiss said this week. He said he understands that he may still seek a new trial under some circumstances and that his attorneys are pursuing “all leads possible to this end ... as far as available money and manpower will permit." But he was judged, he contends, in a court of unjustly inflamed public opinion and, as h\s book title indicates, it is to that court that he addresses his argument. Hiss was a promising young government career man from the early days, of the New Deal. In 1947 he left the State Department, where he had worked for six years, rising to be director of United Nations affairs, to become president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. In the summer of 1948, Chambers, then a senior editor of Time magazine, told the House UnAmerican Activities Committee that he had been a courier for a Communist spy ring in Washington in the 19305. He named Hiss as a fellow Communist. Hiss concluded his book with this- "personal comment:” “The ordeal of fighting false charges has disrupted my life and has brought pain to me and to my family. But nothing can take away the satisfaction of having had a part in government programs in which I strongly believed. I feel deep satisfaction that I took part in the creative efforts of the New Deal and in the formation of the United Nations. ‘"Die democratic ideals which motivated me in government service continue to shape my outlook on life.” Trade in a good town — Decatur

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Heavy Traffic BUFFALO, N. Y. — OF- Traffic violators in Buffalo reached into their pockets for $386,892.95 in fines In 1956, easily topping the previous high ante to the city’s

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