Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 114, Decatur, Adams County, 14 May 1957 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Oppose Dulles Plan On Newsmen Visits Letters Are Opposed 3-1 On China Ban WASHINGTON 1 UP*—-Secretary of State John Foster Dulles’ mail is running more than 3 to 1 against his position that American newsmen should be barred from gathering news in- Communist China. Dulles has received “around 90 letters” since March 1 on the issue, according to the State Department. Nearly 70 opposed Dulles' stand against allowing newsmen to enter Red China. Dulles can’t be surprised by the reaction he is getting from letter writers, editors, publishers, some members of Congress, veterans and other organizations. Hardly a word has been spoken or a voice raised publicly in support of his position. Dulles is on the brink of a new barrage of Questions on the news ban. If the secretary holds a news FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Many wearers ol false teeth have suffered real embarrassment because their plate dropped, slipped or wobbled at just the wrong time. Do not live in fear of this happening to you. JUst sprinkle * little FASTEETH. the alkaline (non-acid) powder, on your Platea. Hold false teeth more firmly, •o they feel more comfortable. Does not sour. Checks "plate odor" (denture breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug counter.
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conference next Tuesday, his normal day to meet with reporters. newsmen will quiz him on at least two new points he has recently raised in defense of his position. In an April 30 letter to Arthur Hays Sulzberger, publisher and chairman of the board of the New York Times, Dulles made these two points among others: 1. “The constitutional 'freedom of the press' relates to publication and not to the gathering of news.” 2. "Foreign policy and diplomacy cannot; succeed unless, in fact, it channels the activities of our people, and in this respect newspaper mien have also their loyalty and patriotic duty.” Editor and Publisher, the newspaper trade weekly, charged that this statement by Dulles endangers freedom of the press and casts suspicion on operations of the press. Special Scholarships For Vets' Orphans Special scholarships to aid with college education are available to all children of service men killed in action in the nation's wars. Jam* K. Staley, service officer of the American Legion announced today. , Persons interested in the scholarships. which amount to sllO a month, should contact Staley. Youths eligible for these scholarships should be advised of them when they enter high school so they may plan a pre-college course in high school.
Tride In a good town — Decatur
Demands Probe Os Inmates Release Ex-Patient Admits Rape And Slaying GARY «N — Lake County Prosecutor Metro Holovachka today called for an investigation into proceedures for releasing inmates of Norman Beatty Hospital at Westville in the wake of a confession from a former mental patient that he murdered an elderly arthritic victim. Gerry Stull, 16, admitted to police Monday he raped Miss Myrtle Cabeen, a Hammond widow, and then killed her with a butcher knife. > Stull was the second former Beatty inmate to confess to a rape-slaying in the last two weeks. George Robert Brown earlier confessed to the rape-slaying offi 16-year-old New Chicago girl and a Gary beauty parlor operator a month apart -in 1956. Holovachka said the patients at Beatty “are not screened properly. Many of the patients in that hospital should be in prison institutions." The prosecutor added there is nothing he can do about the situation because it is out so his jurisdiction. "But it’s about time the Governor did. There should be a full scale investigation of that place,” Holovachka said. Stull was arrested when several of his friends used a flashlight to
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
witness the rape-slnying through n window and later told police about the crime. He was seized short time later as he wandered drunßenly »near his home here. Holovachka said "we don’t know how many others just like that boys are wandering around the streets right this minute. Plenty of the patients they dismiss over at Beatty should be picked up.” He said it “was just an example” of what might continue to happen if mental patients are not screened properly before being released. Delay Showdown On Postal Rate Boost Second Class Hike Showdown Delayed Washington <up> — The House Post Office Committee today postponed until Thursday a showdown on the administration’s proposal to increase postal rates for newspapers and magazines 60 per cent over a four-year period. Chairman Tom Murray < D-Tenn.) announced the postponement just as the committee was scheduled to meet behind closed doors to try to settle a controversy over second class rate hike and thus complete action on the administration's plan to hike postage rates 462 million dollars in the next fiscal year. Murray gave no reason for the postponement by the committee. The Senate approved without I change the biggest part of the ad-
ministration's bill last week calling for a $365,800,000 hike in first class and air mail rates and a 128 million dollar boost /or third class mail. The second class rate proposal, though totalling less In dollars, produced the biggest controversy. Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield'proposed four annual 15 per cent hikes in the newspaper and magazine rates to bring in 33 million dollars annually by the 1961 fiscal £ear. Pending before the committee are conflicting proposals to raise and lower these hikes. Other amendments call for a lesser increase—or none at all—for smaller publications. ■ The administration’s bill would exempt newspapers with a press run of less than 5,000 copies from the second class boosts. Neither die second nor third class inScreases would apply to mail of non - profit religious, charitable, fraternal or educational organizations. The first class hikes would increase the charge for mailing regular and air mail letters and post cards a penny each. SUBPENA (Continued from Pn«e One) _ no subsequent deal which removed Teamster pickets from certain of Seymour’s trucks and those of certain other truckers. Questions tossed at Fruehauf and Seymour were based on a series of memos which purport to have been signed by Arthur D. Condon Who, like Landa, is associated with the law firm headed by former Sen. Millard E. Tydings iD-Md.l. The firm until recently represented Beck and Condon assisted him in his testimony before the committee in March. Condon, at the tkne of the memos, was a member of an independent advisory committee advising the trucking industry. Fruehauf and Seymour also were members. i Strike Deal Charged Landa was marked in for copies of the memos. One of them dated Aug. 11. 1955 said New England truckers were circulating a letter criticizing Beck, Fruehauf and Seymour on the* ground that a truckers strike was settled as a result of a ’dear’ which they engineered. Landa’s name popped up at the outset of the hearing Monday when Fruehauf said the attorney represented him when he sought—and received —a $1,500,000 loan from the Teamsters to fight off an attempt by a “raider” to gain control of the Fruehauf company in a proxy fight. If you nave something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad, it brings results.
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Historic Flight By Jet Fighter Planes Non-Stop Hop From London, Los Angeles LOS ANGELES W — The Air Force took credit today for staging the longest flight of a singleplace jet fighter plane—a 6,710mile non-stop hop from London to* Los Angeles. The history-making flight was completed Monday when three North American FIOOC Supersabres touched down at International Airport 14 hours, 5 minutes after they left London. The sweptwing jets averaged about 480 mphThe operation was made possible by in-flight refueling contacts with giant Kbso tanker bombers along the route which took the planes over Scotland. Iceland, Labrador, New York, Detroit and San Antonio. One of the Tactical Air Command planes had its plexiglass canopy ripped off in re-fueling. The pilot. Jack Bryanr, 28. Muskogee, Okla., suffered minor cuts over the eye in the mishap but managed to continue for the remaining four hours of the flight despite the bitter cold. The flight commemorated the 350th anniversary of the settlement of Jamestown, Va., first permanent English settlement in the New World. Six jet planes were in the original flight that left London, but three of them landed at Jamestown with gifts from the Queen of England. All-Twins Day At Fort Wayne June 1 Tri-State twin club, will be held Tri-State win club, will be held at the Franke park pavilion in Fort Wayne Saturday, June 1. Registration, with a fee of sl, will begin at 10. a.m., and a basket lunch will be held at 12 noon for those wishing to participate. Judging and awarding of loving cup prizes will start at 1:30 p.m. Awards will be given to the oldest, youngest, most in one family, most unlike, most identical mixed sets, farthest distance, and most alike in age groups, both male and female, infant to 6,7 through 13, 14 through 21, 22 ■ through 40, and 41 and over. The i event will close with a WOWO record hop at 7:30 p.m. for twins and their families and friends. If you have something to sell or i rodms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — they bring results.
MRS. AMERICA CROWNED WINNER OF THE “Mrs. America” contest is statuesque Mrs. Lindwood Findley, southern beauty from the District of Columbia. Th® new queen is the mother of four children, wife of an Air Force Lieutenant Colonel, and does all her own housework in their seven-room home in Arlington, Va. _
ISRAEL (Com(lune* from Prnre Owe) 280 million dollars in pounds sterling frozen by Britain at start of the Suez crisis. Egypt will now get some of those funds in British canal tolls. The British decision to use the Suez Canal on Egypt’s t<*ms brought reports from Jerusalem that Israel would try to send a cargo through the canal in a chartered ship to test Egypt’s blockade At the first opportunity. But Israeli sources said the nation would hold up its plans to send an Israeli-owned vessel through the canal until U.N. Sec-retary-General Dag Hammarskjold tries to soften the Egyptian attitude. Israel has warned Egyptian attempts to halt the ship would be taken as an “act of war.” Israel did not make it clear what it would do if the Egyptians stopped its cargo. Current plans call for the cargo to be shipped to Haifa from East Africa aboard the Danish vessel Jens Toft which would be chartered to Israel. The test ship will try it later. Arab Kings to Meet // An Israeli delegation spokesman at the United Natiorts siid meanwhile Syria’s latest complaint against his country appeared to x be part of an Arab move to throttle Israel’s economy. ' Syria, in a letter to U.S. Ambassador Jienry Cabot Lodge, the Security Council president for May, said Israel created a threat to pdhce by building a bridge in the demilitarized area of the Jluleh
TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1957
marshes in northeast Palestine. Israeli officials took the view that Syria was trying to divert attention from the forthcoming meeting of three pro-Western Arab k'ngs In Iraq and at the same time bolster the prestige of the Damascus government at a time of threatened political upheavals at home. King Hussein of Jordan is to join King Saud of Saudi Arabia and King Feisal of Iraq in Iraq later this week in a meeting which is expected to move all three nations closer to the West and cut further Jordan’s ties with Egypt and Syria. In -this connection Jordan announced a major diplomatic shuffle involving the replacement of all personnel in the Jordanian embassy in Cairo and the appointment of a new military governor. Jordan also was reported naming new ambassadors to Baghdad and Washington.
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