Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 136, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1958 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
New Contract Talks By UAW, Big Three Union Leadership Wins Obedience DETROIT (UPD —New contract talks between the United Auto Workers and the automotive big three — General Motors, Ford and Chrysler—resume todav with the union leadership indicating it has DEOATDR Tonite, Wed., Thurs. THE laugh OF Your life timet NEAR THE WATER bLUitirunui MH«KOU>I GIA SCAD Uh HOHMAN AWf FRANCIS KEEHAM WVNH FRED CURN OAGAMR RUSS Tttßim JffF RICHARDS PLUS — Tom & Jerry Cartoon.
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won obedience from its membership. The UAW took the disciplining of 10 more of its minor officials at Chrysler plants Monday without a murmur. The acceptance of Chrysler's disciplinary action by the UAW ans plant workers indicated that for the time being at least, the union leadership could count on its members not to institute any wildcat strikes. Similar disciplining of more than 200 committeemen last week by Chrysler sparked wildcat strikes at two plants here and idled 5,400 w rkers. The 10 officials disciplined Monday received one to three day suspensions for violating new rules covering arbitration of grievances the company set up when ‘‘no contract" production began June 1— the expiration date of the old contract between Chrysler and the UAW. The UAW is trying to keep its workers in the plants at all costs during the next months, hoping to apply maximum pressure on the auto companies for settlement of its demands when the changeover to 1959 model production begins and when the companies want and rieed steady production. Richmond Man Dies From Blast Burns RICHMOND, Ind. (UPD —James C. Boswell, 42, Richmond, died Monday in a Lexington, Ky., hos-i pital from injuries sustained when! a mixture of gasoline and hot road tax exploded as he worked on a ! highway construction project. i
Reds May Release Two Priests Sunday Last Os Priests To Be Held By Chinese HONG KONG (UPD—The last two American priests held in Red China prisons are expected to be freed Sunday. The only Americans left in jail then will be four civilians sentenced to terms ranging from fifteen yeafs to life. ", 4 The two priests are Joseph P. McCormick, of Ossining, N. Y., and Cyril P. Wagner, of Pittsburgh, Pa. Both were arrested in Shanghai, June 1.5 1953, and later were sentenc' • o five years in prison. The othe lour, Americans in prison are John T. Downey of New Britain, Conn.; Richard C. Fecteau of Lynn, Mass.; Robert W. McCann of Altadena, Calif., and Hugh F. Redmond of Yonkers, N. Y. Fecteau and Downey are U. S. Army civilians captured when their plane was shot down over Manchuria in December, 1952. Downey received a life sentence and Fecteau got 20 years. McCann who was sentenced to 15 years and Redmond who got life both are businessmen convicted, as were Downey and Fecteau, of I being spies. : Wagner has been suffering from a serious astfyma condition for several years, but like McCormick is understood to be in good
/•t... . . I ♦ THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
health otherwise!'-'Wagner has been confined to a hospital at various times. It is expectfd that they will be released either 14 or 15 when their sentences expire. Boy Scouts To Hear Program On Safety Legion Boy Scouts Will Meet Thursday A program by the Indiana state police will be presented to Boy Scout troop 63, sponsored by the American Legion, at the Legion home Thursday evening. Patrol officer Gene Rash and an officer from the public relations department will present a film on traffic safety entitled "A day in court.’’ The following Wednesday, June 18. the scout troop will make a guided tour of selected operations in the local Central Soya plant. The scouts will provide their own transportation to the local company. They are to be present at the personnel office at 3 p. m. Art Burris, will be in charge of the group tour. Thursday, June 19, the regular scout meeting will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Arnold, 316 Limberlost Trail, Stratton Place. A program will be held on the patio, after which ! a wiener roast will be held by the fireplace, / Trade in a good town — Decatiy.
Troops Half New Clashes Os Cypriots Columns Os Greek, Turkish Cypriots Routed By British NICOSIA (UPI) — British patrols raced into action today and headed off new clashes when columns of Greejc and Turkish Cyp-, riots armed to the teeth with clubs, rocks and knives converged on each other just outside. Nicosia. The mobs were dispersed. But the island endured a tense truce while Greece and Turkey, threatening NATO unity, debated the Cypriot crises before the Atlantic Alliance council meeting in Paris. Today’s threatened violence erupted when each side heard rumors the other was about to attack. I Gangs were hastily mobilized for more of the mob action which has left six dead and scores wounded in the past four days. Other armed gangs were reported deploying in the out-country a’-eas not covered by curfews which Gov. Sir Hugh Foot slapped on nearly every town on the island to stop the weekend rioting. He immediately imp' "da total ban on movement. About 10,000 sh troops and
'’olonial police iurced the rigid curfews, whicl in Nicosia appar'Hv was causing a food shortage in the Turkish quarter. Riot souads had to stop turks from looting Greek grocery stores. Feuding over the future of the island has caused a near breakdown in Greek and Turkish relations. The Athens government ordered its ambassador to Turkey not to return to Ankara from a current visit homie. The Greek move to bring the tricky Cypriot problem up before the Atlantic council led to reports that NATO Secretary - General Paul-Henri Spaak may resign. A Turkish policeman was shot and killed in a residential section of Nicosia Monday night. Within an hour of the police- I man’s death, a Turkish - Cypriot < i mob seeking vengeance attacked a 1 Greek - Cypriot woman. British troops rescued her but she was 1 ■ reported in critical condition from ’ ax wounds. ’
A bomb was thrown at the government secretariat in the center of Nicosia during the night but no details on damage or casualties were available. The furious week end fighting had been stopped for nearly 24 hours by British security forces who slapped rigid curfews on nearly every major city and town. The Cypriot population is threeouariers Greek and one-quarter Turkish. The Greeks seek union of the entire island with their motherland. The Turks want it divided between Greece and Turkey. King Paul of Greece opened a new session of Parliament Monday ] with a solemn pledge that his country “would never cease fighting through all diplomatic and political means” to gain self-determina-tion for Cyprus. Bov Scout Troop 62 Wins Blue Ribbon Seven members of Boy Scout troop 62, sponsored by the Decatur Lions club, won a couhcil blue ribbon for proficiency at the Uyeeday camporee at Fort Wayne this weekend. A series of tests in scouting skills was given each group there from the four districts of the Anthony Wayne council. Those who participated were Randy Cliffton,
Zane Zwick, Bob Auer, Steve Jac- < obs, Eddie Morgan, Ralph Buett- ’ ner and Nathan Gonzales. J Kenneth Jennings, scoutmaster, 1 and James Ehler, assistant scoutmaster, accompanied the youths. ‘ Worship services were held at the camporee Sunday morning, but other events scheduled for Sunday, including the presentation of i awards, pot luck dinner for parents and friends, and the closing ceremony, were cancelled because of rain. Awards will be presented at a later date. _ . DULLES rConttnued from Page one) , The President’s one-page letter was designed to speed completion of details fort he meeting. The exact date, site and other details had not been set earlier. Eisenhower said, “I propose that these discussions begin on or about July 1 in Geneva.” He brushed aside Khrushchev’s suggestion that the talks be held in Moscow. The Soviet premier said earlier that Geneva was suitable but that he preferred Moscow. "While we appreciate your offer to hold these talks in Moscow,’’ Eisenhower’s note said, “we believe that Geneva would be preferable from our standpoint and note that it would be acceptable to you." If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.
Release Crowley On Bail Pending Trial , American Is Charged With Tokyo Murder TOKYO (UPI)—A Tokyo district judge agreed today to release American businessman Joseph P. Crowley on 300,000 yen ($833) bail from the Tokyo jail where he is awaiting trial on charges he fatally beat his brother-in-law. The decision came too late for ’ Crowley’s release today and his attorney, Arthur Mori, said it probably would be late Wednes- ■' day before the 48-year-old former Yale football star is freed from 1 Tokyo’s /metropolitan police headquarters cell. Earlier the Tokyo district court ‘ named Judge Eaburo Ya shim a ■ head of a three-judge court to try ; Crowley. Mori said Tokyo District Judge Sho Hinohara had agreed to re- ! lease Crowley on bail on condi- • tion the Connecticut man remain in Japan until the trial is com- ■ leted and that he appear at ; every session. I Japanese legal processes were speeded up to permit Crowley’s . release on bail and Mori said "We . were very lucky that we got it , today—the prosecutors could have ! held it up until tomorrow.’’ I Crowley was indicted Monday . on charges of inflicting injuries i leading to the death of T. A. D. (Tad) Jones, 45, son of the late Yale football coach Tad Jones. If convicted he faces a sentence of two to 15 years. Eastern U.S. Hit By Violent Storms Violent Wind, Rain Storms Over Areas By United Press International Violent wind and rain storms, > laced with tornadoes, hit the weather-bruised eastern third of the nation for the second day in a row. Tornado funnels were reported from the Dakotas to Texas, storms raged into New’ England, but it was the east central portion of the nation that continued to take the worst beating. Damages in Indiana alone exceeded one million dollars in the weather attack that began late Sunday. At least seven weathercaused deaths were reported in
the Hoosier state. Biting winds swept central Illinois and the U.S. Weather Bureau said winds exceeding 60 miles per hour drove hail stones before them. A storm near Anderson, Ind., toppled telephone poles late Monday and moved a barn to the middle of a highway. Trees were uprooted along a two-block area in Marion, Ind. A bolt of lightning started a fire at a West Point, lowa, quarry and spread to two tons of dynamite which exploded, digging a 15-foot deep crater. In most places, though, it was the unrelenting drive of wind and rain that piled up damages in an unspectacular, but costly, manner. Rivers brimmed over their banks, closing highways and washing out bridges. Rains measured almost a half-foot deep in some parts of Indiana and swelled rivers, driving some families to high ground. Flood waters measured four feet deep in the small Wyoming town of Yoder, but receded late Monday. Although tornado alerts were listed in the central Midwest, the weather pattern merely seemed, to be shifting. Heavy thunderstorms pounded the Dakotas and Minnesota during the night, and an unconfirmed tornado was reported at Oaks, N.D. Fargo, N.D., reported almost % inch of rain.
There also were scattered show-! ers and storms along the nation’s' underbelly. At Merkel, Tex., near | Abilene, a railroad crewman re- ■ portd a funnel cloud. In the Pacific Northwest, rain! and drizzle continued. Most j amounts were light, however. If you have something to sell or rooms forrent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results
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Cub Scout Pack 3061 To Tour Baer Field Cub Scout pack 3061 will leave from the Lincoln school Thursday at 12:30 o’clock for a tour of Baer Field. They are requested to be in full uniforin. Lodge To Reply To Charges By Russia Security Council Os UN Meets Today UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPD —U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge is expected today to warn all nations—including Russia—to keep their noses out of Lebanon’s affairs. Today’s Security Council meeting affords Lodge his first opportunity to reply to the viled Soviet charge that the Lebanese crisis is a U.S. maneuver to keep President Camilla Chamoun in office—•with troops if need be. The U.S. ambassador was attending a Cabinet meeting in Washington ’ Friday, when the council began debate on Lebanon’s charge of “massive interference” by the United Arab Republic in the current Lebanese revolt. Israel’s recent capture of Lebanese rebels' shortcuting adtoss its territory to be trained in Syria is regarded as lending support to Lebanon’s charge of UAR interference. At Friday s meeting, most of the council’s members took the stand that Lebanese Foreign Minister Charles Malik had made a good case against the UAR in his report on the situation. The chief dissenter was Soviet Ambassador Arkady A. Sobolev, who cited an alleged “opposition" charge that Lebanon’s leaders are trying “to justify claims for foreign interference and, in fact, the dispatch of foreign troops and landing parties on Lebanese territory.” Trade in a good town — Decatur. |
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TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 1»58,
Says Atomic Secret Exchange Is Vital British Leader And Ike Hold Conference WASHINGTON (UPD-Britlsh Prime Minister Harold Macmillan has told President Eisenhower the United States must exchange atomic secrets with his nation before Britain can agree to suspend nuclear tests, informed sources said today. He also urged that free world nations provide new capital to finance world trade, that the intern ati on a 1 monetary fund be strengthened and enlarged and that new efforts be made to persuade Germany to increase its loans and investments abroad. These were the major topics, sources said, that the two leaders discussed Monday at the first of their informal talks on world problems. They interrupted their discussions today to fly by helicopter from the White House lawn to. Baltimore. Macmillan was to deliver the commencement address at Johns Hopkins University there after being introduced by the President. Eisenhower’s brother, Dr. Milton Eisenhower, is president of Johns Hopkins. After the return flight to Washington .Macmilan was scheduled to confer with Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. He and the President will have what the White House described as a “working dinner” tonight. ' At Monday’s two and one-half hour meeting, it was understood, the President and MacmiUan also reviewed the French crisis, expressing mutual optimism that Gen. Charles de GauUe can solve the North African problem. Both the White 1 House and the State Department maintained official silence on what was discussed. If vou have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.
