Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 221, Decatur, Adams County, 19 September 1957 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

Top Teamster Union Leaders Opposing Hoffa Anti-Hoffa Drive Spurts On Report Os Union Corruption WASHINGTON (UP)—The antiHoffa drive in the embattled Teamsters Union spurted ahead today on the basis aS a sizzling report on Teamster corruption by the AFL-CIO Ethical Practices Committee. Labor sources said highly placed Teamster officials now have joined the campaign to block the bid of James R. Hoffa, Midwest Teamster boas, to be president of the 1,400,000 - member trucking union The committee report charged Hoffa, a Teamster vice president, “associated with, sponsored and promoted the interests of notorious labor racketeers’’ in violation of trade union morality. ' A Sweeping Indictment The report said the Teamsters Union as a whole is dominated by corrupt influences and does not measure up to AFL-CIO ethical standards. If adopted by the AFLCIO Executive Council at its New York meeting next week, the report will undoubtedly lead to a clean-up-or-get-out order to the Teamsters. The 64-page report was seen as a blunt warning to the Teamsters that election of Hoffa at their forthcoming Miami Beach, Fla., convention will assure their expulsion from the AFL-CIO. Hoffa is currently the leading contender for the presidency being vacated by Dave Beck, who is not seeking reThe report said not only Hoffa but Beck and Teamster Vice President Frank Brewster also “extensively’’ used union funds for personal purposes- The findings amounted to a sweeping indictment of the present Teamster leadership and a warning to the Teamster membership that no cleanup will be acceptable while the present hierarchy remains in power. Report Excluded Members The committee specifically exempted rank and file members of the nation’s largest union from its indictment, asserting they “want and are entitled to have a clean union.'* The report said Hoffa violated trade union morality by misusing union funds, borrowing money from employers with whom the union dealt and benefitting person—ally from settling a strike. Its strongest language was reserved for Hoffa’s connections with New York mobster Johnny - and other “notorious labor racketeers.’’ , ’“The list of many of Hoffa s proteges and friends reads like a rogues' gallery,” the committee said. “We do not accept Hoffa’s explanation that these associations were an attempt to rehabilitate juvenile delinquents ” o Busy Parents HARTFORD, Conn. — W — Mr and Mrs. Milton Susman watched their son graduate from Michigan State and their daughter ' from Wellesley College within U-hour period, traveling 1.500 jpiles for the two ceremonies.

FRL & SAT. WjfcT ■■ i rs) % — ADDED COMEDY — : HUMPHREY BOGART: : AUDREY HEPBURN j i WILLIAM HOLDEN : —o_4j— ; Sunday—"Frkncis is the Nary” A "The Stranre One"

Approves Fund For Probation Director Budget Committee Approves Request INDIANAPOLIS (UP)—The Indiana State Budget Committee late Wednesday approved a request from the Board of Corrections asking for funds to fill the vacant position of director of probation at a salary of $7,500 annually. The position was created by law but Was vacant during the administration of former Governor George N. Craig. In other action the board: Approved a request from the Board of Mines and Mining for a new building to house the bureau at an estimated cost of SIB,OOO. Approved a request from the Indiana State Farm for additional funds to add correctional officers to its staff. The board cut the amount from the requested $36,750 j to $26,750 Set the salaries for technical employes of the Conservation Department. Salaries for engineers were set at $530-775 per month; for entomologists, $325-575; for employes in the forestry and fish and game departments, $325-600; and for employees in the lands and waters department, $275-625. All were reductions from the original requests. • Decline to authorize $10,500 annually for a state consultant in clinical psychology in the Division of Mental Health. The board did approve a salary of $15,000 annually plus $2,000 maintenance for a deputy director of mental health in the division. The post has not been filled. The board voted against raising the salary of superintendents at two tuberculosis hospitals from $9,000 to SIO,OOO annually The proposed increase would have affectedsuperintendents at institutions at New Albany and Rockville. The board also rejected a request to increase the salary of starting examiners for financial institutions from $4,500 to $5,000 annually. The board took no action on a request from the Highway Department for six paid holidays and from the Personnel Board on an interpretation of travel regulations concerning employes stationed at institutions.

Enters Guilty Plea To Robbery Charge SOUTH BEND (W — David Wells, 44, New Albany, awaited a possible 25-year pHson term today after pleading guilty to a $6,734 robbery of a Logansport financial institutionlastweek. - Walls made the plea Wednesday in Federal Court at Fort Wayne. Judge Luther M. Swygart ordered a pre-sentence investigation. Tne maximum sentence would be 25 years in federal prison and a $lO,000 fine. New Haven Woman Is Slated For Election * ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (W-Mrs. Robert M. Hoey, New Haven, Ind., was slated to be elected and installed today as central division vice president of the American Legion Auxiliary. DULLES f Continued from Page One) material from nuclear arms and to make them into “discriminating weapons, suitable for defense against attacking troops, submarines and bombers, and for interception of intercontinental missiles. “It is, of course, essential that experimentation with nuclear weapons should not itself carry a threat to human life. The United States has a concern second to none in this matter. "We shall invite the UN. to send observers to one of our next tests so that they can see how these tests are conducted.” ATOMIC (Continued from Page One) its primary purpose—to prove that limited nuclear devices can be fired underground without escape of radioactive materials into the air. It was the first deep underground nuclear blast ever touched off by American scientists. It is not known whether the Russians have conducted a similar experiment. The U.S. has conducted two underwater tests and two previous shallow underground tests.

Tonight & Friday 2 Science Fiction Hits! ‘‘The GIANT CLAW” Jeff Morrow, Mara Corday & “The Night The World Exploded” Kathryn Grant, Wm, Leslie -0 SAT. ONLY—Robert Taylor in “Up on a Dead Jockey" Dorothy Malone, Gia Scala -0— — • Sun. Mon. Tues.—'Pajama Game’ DORIS DAY, John Raltt

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1957