Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 233, Decatur, Adams County, 3 October 1957 — Page 5
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1957
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, RWJIANA
PAGE FIVE
Ike Discloses Corruption In Labor Probed Says Investigation Os Labor Corruption By Justice Dept. WASHINGTON <UP> -President Eisenhower disclosed today that that Justice Department for some months has been investigating charges of corruption in labor ,•' unions. So far, he said, the department has not made a report. Eisenhower made the statement at his news conference when asked whether the government planned any further steps to curb labor corruption or collusion In the labormanagement field. The questioner said he referred particularly to the Teamsters Union and the trucking industry. The President replied that he began conferring with his top labor and legal aides when the corruption charges were first made. He said the object was to determine whether the government could take any further steps. Eisenhower’s news conference was devoted almost exclusively to the Little Rock. Ark., school integration crisis. Hojvever, in a brief discussion of the federal budget. He said it is going to be extremely hard to cut federal spending to 70 billion dollars a year. For one thing, he said, all departments want more money, partly because of rising costs. ’. Eisenhower said that he did not see how the defense budget can be *’ brought,.below 38 billion dollars. But he held out some hope of ’ by cutting back more on other n . programs like water pollution, power developments and vocational training to state governments. In other news conference highlights, the President: —Said he had recently received W a message from King Saud of ? Saudi Arabia expressing warm friendship, satisfaction with past'-' ' U. S. -Arabian relations, and a hope that such friendship would V grow. —Said the Syrian situation seems to be solidifying to some extent, with fears of bordering nations quieted. But he declined to specu* late whether the danger to the free': H world has lessened. —Referred to the superintndnt of the Naval Academy a question on whether the Navy - Georgia football game in Norfolk should be cancelled because of the integration problem. He said he has enough responsibilities in that field already. Dulles And Gromyko To Confer Saturday tort To Exchange Views A On Various Issues ' o-ni ?rt 9d WASHINGTON -i UP>—Secretary , of State John Foster Dulles will , attempt to smoke out Soviet intentions on disarmament and the.' Middle East when he confers thii’’ * week end with Soviet Foreign Min-,' ister Andrei A. Gromyko. Administration officials said to- ’ ' day the two topics head the list r,ri ’ of world issues expected to come up at the Dulles-Gromyko meetpt ing. -rniot the State Department announced# Wednesday night Dulles had.invitdmß ed Gromyko to come to Wa«|n c: H ington Saturday afternoon for "exchange of views on various i»- ; . ternational issues of concern to both the United States and the . USSR.” -oM At Dulles’ Home The meeting will be held at M Dulles’ home on the edge of man-sion-lined Rock Creek Park. An aide said Dulles “likes to stay “ home and work on Saturdays" so he decided to have the dour Russian visit him there. State Department officials said nu international emergen--*cs’ prompted Dulles' invitation. They also said Dulles does not have any new disarmament or Mideast peace plans to propose to Gromyko. -•- Dulles' idea, officials said, is to find out whether the Soviets are as tough as- they sound on disarmament, the Middle East, Germany and other important issues long deadlocked between East and West. Dulles has told friends recently he doubts talks with the Russians would do any good except possibly on disarmament. Arms Feeling Optimistic The feeling persists in official quarters here thiit the Russians may vet aU re 9 to something in the way of disarmament. They thought a hint of this was given in a comment Sept. 28 in New York by Vasily V. Kuznetsov. Soviet deputy to Gromyko. Kuznetsov told a news conference at the U.N. Moscow might look with favor on a new conference of national leaders with disarmament as the principal topic. The Jim Hill variety of mustard plant weed producers nearly 500,000 seeds per single plant. Trade in a <tou£‘ town — Decatu
