Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 240, Decatur, Adams County, 11 October 1957 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Rural Youth Plans Gifts For Patients To Collect Gifts For Mentally 111 Members of the Adams county rural youth voted to collect Christmas gifts for the mental patients in the state hospital at the regular meeting held last evening at the Boy Scout cabin in Hanna-Nuttman pafk. All members wilF be askefh to bring the gifts to the November 14 rural youth meeting. Registration and mixers were in charge of Barbara Lewton. Legora Markle led the group singing and Gloria Crownover presented the devotions. Carl Bluhm, coUpty president, conducted the business meeting. Plans were made for the group to attend Holiday On Ice in Fort Wayne Oct. 19. Alice Kukelhan is in charge of this activity. The district meeting was announced for Monday night, Oct. 21, at the Wells county 4-H building south of Bluffton. Election of officers and the talk meet will be the features of this meeting. Chairpian Bluhm urged all rural youthens to attend this meeting so that Adams county can retrieve the attendance cowbell. Alan Miller, 1958 rural youth president, presented the proposed rural youth program for the coming year. The date for the annual banquet and installation of officers was set for Nov. 16. Other dates of important activities Were announced for the semi-annual tour reunion to be held in Indianapolis Oct. 19 and 20 and the state rural youth convention in Indianapolis Nov. 13. A talk fest was. the educational feature with everyone present having an opportunity to do impromptu speaking. This was conducted by Barbara Lewton. Refreshments served by Legora Markle brought the meeting to a close*—— PRESIDENT 'Continued from Page One) these other satellite developments: —ln Barcelona, Spain, space scientists said Russia’s next big objectives are sending up a satellite to scan earth with television which would keep the entire world under constant watch. —At the United Nations, U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge called for international action to check-rein space rockets before they “blow us to bits.’’ Photos From The Moon —ln Belgrade, Yugoslavia, a top Russian scientist, Alexander Sherbin, said the satellite now revolving around the world carries complete telephoto equipment for transmission of photographs back to Russia. But he said he did not know if the equipment is working. —ln New York, Dr. Kenneth Franklin of the Hayden Planetarium said the Sputnik is transmitting data in code on its radio signal. But he said die code is unknown to Americans. —Late Thursday observers at New Haven, Conn., reported sighting the last stage rocket which hurled Sputnik into space. It was the first official sighting in the U.S. of any part of the Red satellite which has been observed on its 96-minute orbit in other parts of the world. —The Cambridge radio astronomy field station reported just before midnight the satellite was only 150 miles above the earth, the lowest it has been since it was launched a week ago today. Abreast Os Events DETROIT — W — Amid the recent heavy rains, the Tyre drivein theater dispayed the current movie: "Many Rivers to Cross."
— Last Time Tonight — V a yul >JV * IV Aa W m Technicolor Comedy! V 1 AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER" Cary Grant. Deborah Kerr ALSO - BhorU 15c - 50 c SUN. MON. TUES. — THE FLAME THAT MADE HER A STAR... ■ I flame that M consumed her i to ° Boon [ tß \ —o o>—_ SATURDAY —Comedy & Action in 2 Swell Pictures! LAUGH HIT! JUNGLE THALLER! ■ huntx HAU I wmWMt wn»»K» mGMI \ Boys | fTffCTffl IrriHaii ' AcauMBMMcnM AH Mlt<o Atmri RtCTUtf I
End Fingerprinting Os Foreign Visitors Requirement Eased By U.S. Government WASHINGTON (W — Abolition of fingerprinting for mogt foreign visitors was timed to clear a big obstacle in the way of forthcoming U.S.-Soviet talks on East-West cultural exchanges, informed sources said today. The discussions are set for later this month between Soviet Ambassador FGeorgi N. Zaroubin and William S. B. Lacy, special assistant to Secretary of State John Foster Dulles on East-West contacts. The talks will range over a whole series of American and. Russian proposals for closer contacts between the two nations as a possible way to ease tensions. » The United States Thursday announced it was ending a 15-year-old requirement that all non-offi-cial foreign visitors be fingerprinted. ~ —-— Under the new regulations, to be issued formally this week end or early next week, most visitors coming to the United States for less than a year will no longer have to submit to fingerprinting. Exceptions to the waiver are natives of Ecuador, Liberia and Peru —countries which require that American visitors to their territory be fingerprinted. The principal objector to U. S. fingerprinting was Russia, which charged fingerprinting amounted to an American Iron Curtain barring Soviet and other citizens. ' , * FLU (Continued from Page Ona) at its peak, moved into Madison. Nearly 16 per cent of Madison’s total high school enrollment was absent Thursday with the flu. The figure is about three times above normal. Milwaukee City Health Commissioner E. R. Krumbiegel said he expected the flu epidemic .to last at least three more weeks. The U. S. Public Health Service in Washington estimated 1,077,000 persons have been stricken with flu through last Friday, with 350,000 new cases reported last week. It was the fourth straight week the incidence has climbed. However, the service said the number of deaths blamed on flu and related complications ."show no marked increase over normal occurrence at this time of year." FARMERS <Cont» J»d Ftva) By then, many of the farmers had moved away. Sen. Karl Mundt (R-S.D.), who was also on the speaker's platform, apparently was looking the other way when the barrage landed. “I wasn't aware anything had happened," he said, “so I can’t talk about it." Mundt, an outspoken critic of Benson’s farm policies, said a week ago ”! wouldn’t mind too terribly if Benson resigned.” Benson, who has faced hostile farm audiences, before, said “nothing like this has ever happened to me.” “It’s un-American, certainly, I don't think anything is ever gained by that sort of practices." Some Year Anyway HARTFORD, Conn. —W — Pocket manuals, listing committee assignments, rules and regulations for the 1957 Connecticut legislature, were mailed to lawmakers six weeks after the five-month session ended. Trade in a good town — Decatur
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. fMHANA
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1»57
