Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 203, Decatur, Adams County, 28 August 1958 — Page 12
PAGE FOUR-A
Prayer Stops Fright While Plane Burns Crippled Liner Locates Field Near US Border LOS ANGELES (UPI) —Passengers on a polar flight from London to Los Angeles turned to prayer to avoid panic when their crippled airliner hunted for a landing field near the U. S. - Canadian border. The Trans World Airline plane made a flaming, emergency landing at a World War II landing strip near Cut Bank, Mont., Monday night. The 61 passengers and crew of 10 were brought on to Los Angeles by another four-engine Constellation after a 12-hour stay in Cut Bank. “The prayer was the most noticeable thing,” said Floyd Allen, 46. a missionary from French Camaroun, Africa. “Everyone tried to keep quiet and natural and calm. Everyone was quite courageous, I thought." “People talked quietly to each other” said Thomas Pomposo, 28. Pittsburg, Calif. “The stewardess kept coming back and forth, first instructing us to put on our life jackets when we thought we would land over water, then letting us know we were over Montana. ‘A lot of people prayed—mostly older persons and children.” The airliner, piloted by Capt. Earl Fleet, was directed to the remote airfield by radar units at Cut Bank, Havre, and Malmstrum, Montana. “If it hadn’t been for the radar units, I would have been forced to make a crash landing,” Fleet said. “Our No. 3 propeller fell off. Then the No. 3 engine caught fire. If we hadn’t landed, we might have gone in two or three minutes?’ The veteran pilot said he first noticed the plane’s propeller was acting up near Swift Current, Canada, but had to fly 100 miles before finding a field large enough to land the plane. Japanese Study World LIMA, Peru (UPI) — A group of Japanese scientists have begun a scheduled 10-year study of the principal archeological centers of Peru and Bolivia in search of the origins of civilization in this part of the New World. The archeologists, who comprise the “Andean Scientific Expedition” of the Imperial University of Tokyo, arrived here recently from Japan. Heading the eight-man team is Dr. Eiichiro Ishida, specialist in ethnology and archeology. He explained there is “enormous interest in Japan” in the expedition’s object — to confirm the generally accepted theory that the first inhabitants of America came from Asia via the Bering Straits and Alaska some 20,000 years ago.
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Stale Universities Double Their Budget IU, Purdue, Others Will Ask $48,737,160 INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Indiana's four state colleges and universities today submitted a com-
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bined budget request of $48,737,160 for 1959-61, a figure almost twice the $25,483,000 allotted by the Legislature last year for the 1957-59 biennium. Indiana University topped the list with requests totaling more than 22 million dollars. Purdue was close behind with a request for 18 millions. Ball State and Indiana State Teachers College each asked for $4,298,803. Included in the IU budget was 3 millions to build the first unit of
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, pECATUR, INDIANA
a new 300-bed hospital at the Med- : ical Center here. A university : spokesman said the new hospital I would x help eliminate the dangerous waiting period for heart and brain operations.” A cost-sharing program with the federal government requires , the state to shoulder two-thirds of the cost. IU also asked for 2% millions to build a new University School on the Bloomington campus to replace the present 900-pupil grade
and high school. The present school would be used for the School of Education, a speech and hearing clinic and a reading clinic. Other IU requests were for 3 millions to complete a new geology building; a like amount for a new audio-visual, center building; $2,200,000 for an addition to the chemistry building, and $1,600,000 for a business school addition. Purdue’s biggest request was for 5 millions to start a new
t power plant. Other items inchided s $3,700,000 to complete a veterinary i school; $2,800,000 for a civil engiJ neering building; $2,100,000 for an addition to the physics building; 3 $1,700,000 to expand Oculter Hall, - and a million for a new pharmacy a building. ; Ball State’s top projects were e $1,900,000 for the third unit of a 0 new English and music building and 1% millions for a new men’s s physical education building. v Top project for Indiana State
was 2 millions for a new physical i education building. < The budget request, which was combined for the four schools, said more than 40 million dollars of the requested sum was needed for a 10-year building plan approved by the 1951 Legislature. The 1951 program called for 80 millions, including 16 millions for the 1959-61 biennium. Butthe retha 1959-61 biennium. But the request said 12.9 millions was added up to date and $11,100,000 to ac- 1 j ,
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1958
count for higher construction costs. Blast-Proof CALAIS, Vt. - (UPD - George Lawson was surprised that his car ran off the road, rolled over three times and came to a halt upside down. He had good reason to be surprised. There were six cases of dynamite in the auto Trade In a gooa town — Decatur.
