Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 120, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1957 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
France Seeks U.S. Support On Suez Canal Pineau Seeking To Counter Russians' Backing Os Egypt By UNITED PRESS French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau sought American support today for renewed French efforts to take the Suez Canal out of the '‘one man control" of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser. Pineau went to Washington for a conference with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and was rushing back to New York later for the Security Council meeting on the Suez. Pineau, who already had British support in his search for an international agreement on operation of the canal, hoped to counter the strong Soviet support for Egypt.' f The Soviet support took the form of charges that both the United States and France had encouraged Israel to send a ship through the canal to test the Egyptian blockade of Israeli shipping. U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge planned to answer those charges this afternoon. In Cairo Egyptian political sources welcomed Russia's aid in the Security Council as a “guarantee" the council would not adopt any resolution unfavorable to Egypt’s m a n a g e m e n t of the Canal. The Israeli cabinet met in a five-hour emergency cabinet meet-
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I ing which ended early today to discuss the Eisenhower Doctrine and the U.N. debate on the Suez Canal. Another meeting was called for today. A senior Foreign Ministry spokesman reaffirmed that Israel ; would take no action to force (Egypt’s hand on the canal until Israel determines the amount of support it can expect from the big Western powers. Most of the cabinet session was reported devoted to Israel’s acceptance of the Eisenhower Doctrine, with Premier David BenGurion determined to press for aci ceptance over the opposition of the ’ two left-wing parties in his cabinet, j Other Middle East developments: J Cairo—Abdel Monein Rifai, Jorj dan’s new ambassador to Egypt, ! said he had protested to Nasser , and Foreign Minister Mahmoud I Fawzi against the Egyptian press i attacks on Jordan. Paris—Shipowners of 40 nations including Egypt and Israel met today to study the Suez situation and other problems of sea trade. The group is the "Baltic and International Maritime Conference.” Fort Wayne Lineman Electrocuted Monday FORT WAYNE (UP)—Lloyd B. Shelley, 49, Fort Wayne, was elecI trocuted late Monday when a guy wire brushed against a power line as he worked with an Indiana and Michigan Electric Co. line crew along U.S. 33 northwest of here. Shelley was holding the guy wire on the ground as other members of the crew prepared to insulate it. His attention apparently was distracted for a few moments and he allowed the wire to brush against a line carrying 7,200 volts. If you have someuilng to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad, it brings results.
Reports U.S. Has ’Clean' H-Bombs Minimizes Health Hazards Os Bombs WASHINGTON (UP) — Atomic Commissioner Willard F. Libby said today the United States has developed “clean" H-bombs whiri* would “minimize the potential health hazards” to persons far from the battlefields of nuclear war. Libby did not say whether Russia, tod, has perfected such, weapons. The Russians have claimed some of their tests were staged in such away as to cut down radioactive fallout. But a Soviet test of April 16 was particularly “dirty.” Detonated in southwestern Siberia, it caused unusually heavy fallout in Japan. In a talk to the American Society of Military Engineers, Libby said: — “We have taken the problems of ladioactive fallout into consideration in our weapons development program and have developed and tested clean weapons, that is, weapons in which the amount of radioactive fallout per megaton <1 million tons TNT equivalent) of explosive power is very greatly reduced. “I believe this is a most important development because it would minimize the potential health hazards to those who are far from the scene of battle if nuclear weapons are used.” Libby said again that the present rate of atomic testing by this country, Russia and Britain will not lift the level of radioactive material in man above the so-called “maximum permissable concentration.”
tfIRE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
■' ''/S' 1 J? *. T : ' STANLEY KIRKPATRICK, a member Bf th’e graduating class of Decatur high school, has been given the annual award of The Reader’s Digest association foe students who, by their successful school. work, give promise of attaining leadership in the commupity, it was announced today by Hugh J. Andrews, school principal. Kirkpatiick, who is a threeletter athlete at the school and acthße in extra-curricular activities, will receive an honorary subscription to The Reader’s Digest for one year, and an engraved certificate from the editors, “in recognition of past accomplishment and in anticipation of unusual achievement to come.” The Reader's Digest association has presented these awards yearly in senior high schools throughout the United States and Canada to the highest honor student of the graduating class. The award to Kirkpatrick, who is the son of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Kirkpatrick, of 704 Cleveland street, was made possible by the co-operation of the teaching staff of the local high school. They selected Kirkpatrick to receive the award, designed to stimulate scholarship, citizenship, and continued contact with good reading after graduation. Benson Pleads For World Cooperation Secretary Launches Purdue Conference LAFAYETTE. Ind. (UP) — Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson opened a 10-day conference of International Federation of Ag»ricultural Producers at Purdue University Monday with a plea for world cooperation to solve agricultural problems. Some 200 delegates from 35 countries heard Benson say hp sees the means “toward a common market” among European nations as “adding much to the economic strength 1 of the European community.” “The cooperative way in agriculture is no longer on trial,” Benson said. Benson said .the United States will not engage in “any cutthroat race” for markets abroad even though it will push its farm export program. "The United States will compete fairly in the world,” he said. Benson said it was a “shocking indictment of man’s intelligence” that millions of persons still go to bed hungry each night in parts of the world. Benson said restrictions on amounts of imports are the “most formidable‘trade barrier” and said such restrictions are a more serious problem than tariffs. IKE (Continued from Pane Onel tively allotted $4,400,000,000 for foreign aid. After a later meeting with Republican and Democratic congressional leaders, he reduced the foreign aid figure to about $3,880,000,000. His recommendation today was slightly lower. “A Real Saving” He explained that the reduction was attributable in part to better planning with our Allies, and a continuing improvement of the administration of the program. The President said, however, that 500 million dollars in foreign aid spending originally anticipated for the‘current fiscal year ending June 30 would have to be carried over to the new fiscal year. This would not, in his estimation, affect the budget total. He insisted that his recommendations today represented “not deferred spending but a real saving.” Eisenhower told Congress that a substantial cut in defense assistance overseas by this country automatically would require a reduction in the strength of allied forces and increase the ri ksof local Communist aggression. And that, he said, would “sooner or later” require an increase in the current draft quotas in this country, as well as a substantial increase in our own defense costs. He particularly stressed the need for U.S. aid to the newly independent nations of Asia and Africa. “We simply cannot afford to blight the hopes of the newly independent peoples who turn to the free world for help in their struggle for economic survival,” Eisenhower said. “Should jve do so, these peoples will ” perforce be driven toward Communist or other totalitarian solutions to tlwir problems.”
I Haitian Army Seizes Control Os Government Army Move Follows Ouster Monday Os Army Staff Chief PORT AU PRINCE. Haiti IW — The army seized control of the country, imposed martial law and set a dusk-to-dawn curfew today. The military move followed Monday’s decision to fire Army Chief of Staff Brig. Gen. Leofi Cantave, and replace him with Port au Prince Police Chief Col. Pierre Armand. Army leaders refused to accept this decision and announced it was taking over Haiti following a 12 hour conference at the military headquarters opposite the national palace. A proclamation was issued declaring that Cantave’s dismissal was illegal and that the civilian government was ended. Signed by 10 high-ranking officers, including Armand, it said all were loyal to the new military regime. In a separate letter broadcast with the proclamation, Armand declined the proffered promotion, saying he did not want, to create army disunity. The 10 ministers of the executive council, which had been running the country until elections can be held to choose a new president. went into hiding along with some opposition politicians following the army move. Adoption Scrap To Florida Governor Extradition Hearing Scheduled Thursday TALLAHASSEEN Fla. (UP) — The long fight between the Roman Catholic Church and a Jewish couple over custody of Hildy McCoy, 6, may be decided Thursday by a Protestant governor, who is a father of four and an attorney fully aware of the legal aspects of the case. Gov. Leroy Collins may allow a broad range of evidence at an extradition hearing here Thursday for. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin B. Ellis off Miami Beach. Under the uniform extradition act, the evidence rhust concern the legality of the extradition warrant from Massachusetts, not the guilt or innocence of the Ellises. Collins must decide whether to grant the extradition request of
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i i ?- vi I tx x 1 r FWF*- 4---i A iw ■ fl AOINI ZOU (above), Italy’s new Premier-designate, is photographed as he leaves the Quirinale Palace in Rome after he ' formally accepted the task of forming a new Italian Government. President Giovanni Gronchi gave Zoli the job after the fall of Premier Antonio Segni's Government. (International) Massachusetts Gov. Foster Furcolo and send the Ellises back to Boston to face charges of "kidnaping” Hildy, whom they have raised since infancy. The Ellises want to remain in Florida, where their chances are considered excellent of winning permanent custody of the child in the courts. The governor generally takes a case into consideration following the legal testimony at an extradition hearing. He has indicated his interest in the Ellis case by planning to break precedent and personally sit in'on the hearing. The governor’s office has been deluged with petitions, letters and telgerams bearing some 10.000 names, the overwhelming majority of them calling on Collins to let the Ellises remain in Florida. Many Catholics are among the signers of petitions and letters favoring the Ellises, but leaders in the Catholic church have stood firmly behind the Massachusetts court decision. Hildy was born in Boston in 1951 to an unwed Catholic woman, Marjorie McCoy, 'the mother signed adoption papers 10 days after the infant was born giving Hildy to the Ellises, who have been unable to have children of their own. Later the woman recanted, claiming she had not known the Ellises were Jewish. She began court proceedings to have the child put in a Catholic orphanage for adoption by a Catholic family. She expressed no desire to raise the child herself, although Ellis said he offered to return Hildy to her if she would. tn Massachusetts, the law provides that both parents and children be of the same faith “wherever practicable” in adoption cases. It was on these grounds that the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled against the Ellises after a long court fight.
Warm Weather And Rain Are Forecast Heavy Rainfall In Northern Indiana By UNITED PRESS Temperatures headed for the 80s today despite gloomy skies and the threat of more rain, including downpours in the extreme north portion of Indiana. Readings from 78 to 80 were expected this afternoon over the entire lower two-thirds of.Hoosierland, with highs up to 82 in the far south Wednesday. But the most significant weather news was the probability that the north portion would get "locally heavy rains” today and tonight in the course of shower and thunderstorm activity. Elsewhere, showers and" thunderstorms were due, too, but on ■"Scattered basis. There was a chance of showers again Wednesday. Earlier long-range outlooks indicated Hoosiers could expect rain frequently during the entire week, Despite overcast skies Monday, little rain was recorded. A drizzle and light showers in some areas were barely measurable on rain gauges. Evansville’s 68 topped high readings Monday. Upstate, highs were in the 50s, including 53 at Fort Wayne and 57 at South Bend and Lafayette. The mercury dropped during the night to a range of 48 at Fort Wayne to 57 at Evansville. Lows tonight will range from 56 to 60 after highs from 68 to 80. Highs Wednesday will radge from 68 to 82. 28-Mile Detour Is Lifted In Indiana INDIANAPOLIS (UP) — A 28mile detour on U. S. 52. main highway between Indianapolis and Cincinnati, was lifted today when the Indiana State,Highway Department put back in operation a stretch of the road between Indianapolis and Fountaintown. The crews paved bridge approaches beroad was closed for weeks while tween New Palestine and Carrollton. Three-Year-Old Boy Is Drowning Victim. SUNMAN, Ind. (UP) — Richard Allen Blakley, 3, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. U. Blakley of R. R. 1, Sunman, drowned late Monday when he fell into a water-filled hole his father was digging for a septic tank near here. The boy’s body was found by his four-year-old sister in 19 inches of water. He was pronounced dead on arrival at the Milan Clinic in Milan.
TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1957
Two Men Confess To Cattle Thefts SOUTH BEND, (UP) — Two St. Joseph County men who allegedly rustled cattle and used the back seat of their car to haul the bovines to market are being held in jail here. Police said Robert L. Redman, 22, and Gene Sanderson, 28, confessed to stealing jhree 100-pound calves from the County Home Thursday and selling the cargo at a sales barn for >4l • Swapping Couples Start Honeymoons Mutually Agreed To Exchange Spouses RENO, Nev. JUP) — Two Millbrae, Calif., couples — who exchanged partners, families and homes in a hectic race from one Nevada court bouse to another—were honeymooning today in seclusion. When Dr. Frank E. Schwartz. 38-year-old eye specialist, returns to Millbrae with his new bride. Betty, 35. he will take over the responsibilities of her home and her four children. Betty’s former husband, J. Martin Brooks, 35-year-old owner of a prosperous garden supply firm, will return home as the husband of the former Mrs. Betty Jean Schwartz, 33, and the provider as her two children. The couples were close friends for more than two years after becoming acquainted through church, PTA and Cub Scout activities, tions was something that “just Schwartz said the switch in affecgradually and they came to a mutual agreement on the exchange last Christmas. Mrs. Schwartz and Mrs. Brooks, the best of personal friends, shared living quarters at a Reno motel apartment during the six - weeks’ residency period required for divorce. Monday the residency period was over. The Schwartz couple were married July 28, 1944, in New Kensington, Pa, Their children are Michael, 7, and Lori, 3. Mr. and Mrs.' Brooks were married in Detroit on March 11, 1946, and are the parents of Gregory, 10; Peter, 8; John, 5, and Meriwether, 10 months. Newton Co. Sheriff Dies After Attack KENTLAND (UP) - W. Leslie Strole, 62, Newton County sheriff, died of a heart attack Sunday in his office at the county jail. Strole war elected in 1954 after serving six years as a deputy sheriff.
