Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 2 March 1959 — Page 3

Monday, march jj 1959

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Medical Officer Os • y • 5 Atomic Sub Speaks 'll ■ ■•■ -.• j-’ • ; CHICAGO (UPl'—The medical officer of the atomic submarine ] USS Seawolf today told how painted decks arid luminous dials were a greater danger than a nuclear power plant 'during the sub’s two months underwater. Substances that were “harmless” for short dives in pre-nu-clear ships, Lt.' Cmdr. John H. Ebersole said,' became “serious agd dangerbus materials under the extended diVe qt thb nuclear submarine." Ebersold Was a featured speaker at the annual clinical conference of the ' Chicago Medical Society. J Fresh paint, he said, was a major obstacle -due to fumes it ' continues to throw off several weeks after application, and which become harmful in a close atmosphere. "The only solution lay in stop- . ping the use of these materials while at sea and for two to three weeks before leaving port,” Ebersold said. Radium painted dials, unnoticed in non - nuclear subs, “caused a buildup of air borne radioactivity” and “produced a deceptive nuisance.” On the other hand, Ebersold said, danger di power plant radiation during the 60-day subversion record set in 1958 was “minimal. The average amount of expose was less than 10 per cent of the allowable amount of exposure for industry.” He said future underwater medical research would lie in human psychology, and in the “effect cd lack of exercise, lack of sensory stimuli, day - night relationships, and other .interest which are provided by the unique environment Os a* true submersible. ’

Liner And Tanker Collide During Fog NEW YORK (UPf) — Coast Guard investigators checked the radar equipment of the luxury liner Constitution and the Norwegian tanker Jalanta today to find out why it failed to prevent collision of the ships in a heavy fog. The 30,500-ton American export liner sheared the bow off the 12,228 - ton tanker Sunday at a busy shipping crossroads in the Atlantic 22 miles from the tip of Manhattan Island.- There were no deaths or injuries, and both ships made the Bethlehem Steel Co. yards iin Brooklyn Sunday night under their own steam. Cmdr; Meyer Stockman, Coast Guard officer in charge of the New Yprk marine inspection office, sent investigators to board both vessels when they docked for repairs. They questioned the captains and crews and began a check of the ships’ navigational aids. A formal hearing will be held later. Capt. James W. la Belle of Avon, Mass., master of the Constitution, described the accident as "one of those unfortunate occurrences." Capt Anders Itovald, sxipper of tne Norwegian ship, was not available to the press. The Constitution was en route tp New York with a skeleton crew of 110 from a three-million-dollar alteration job at a Pirginia shipyard. The ship suffered a 40-foot gash on its port side eight feet above the water line, but it was expected to be repaired in time for a scheduled March 9 sailing. The cargo - less Jalanta was bound for Las Piedras, Venezuela, with a crew of 42. » . . . Operators Prevent Suicide By Mother INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Two police department telephone operators talked for 45 minutes Sunday night with a suicide-bent mother who accidentally shot to death one of her three children. r Mrs. Mary Jones and Mrs. Irene Wiegand kept talking with Mrs. Joan Hughes, 23, until Hancock County Sheriff E.W. Kirkpatrick arrived at the Hughes farm home near New Palestine and dissuaded Mrs. Hughes from harming herself. f Mrs. Hughes, fearful of prowlers, said she had a loaded shotgun lying across her lap as she sat in her home while her two-year-old son Larry lay om a couch across the room. When she arose, she said, the gun fell and went off. Pellets hit the child in the head. Realizing what she had done. Mrs. Hughes called Indianapolis police headquarters and hysterically told Mrs. Jones what had happened, adding that she intended to kill herself. The operators kept telling Mrs. Hughes she must spare herself because df her other twp children. OVer 2,500 Daily Democrats are sold and delivered in Decatui each day.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

New Albany Church Is Damaged By Fire NEW ALBANY, Ind ( (UPI) — Authorities today studied the ruins of the Rilgrim Holiness Church to determine the cause of a 840,000 blaze which damaged the building badly Sunday. The ehurch was vacant at the time of the fire, and no one was injured. * 1 Drainage Contractor Is Fatally Injured INDIANAPOLIS (tIPD — Ross E. McCloud, 34, a Danville drainage contractor died in Methodist Hospital Sunday of injuries sustained last Thursday when a bulldozer he was helping unload from a trailer toppled over on him. Graham's Health Cause Os Concern MELBOURNE, Australia tUPD —Evangelist Billy Graham, whose health still was causing concern among his doctors, left here today for a one-day rest at a quiet beach resort. He will resume his Australian crusade Tuesday night Graham’s trip was in line with the advice of a Melbourne physician who demanded Graham get as much rest as possible. However, his illness, a spasm of a blood vessel in one eye caused by strain and tension, was not expected to interfere with his revivalist meetings. The evangelist was reported unaffected by criticism by an Anglican archbishop and a “Billy go home” headline that appeared in, a news magazine. Graham, who attracted more than 52,000 persons to Sidney Meyer Music Bowl Sunday, refused to comment directly on the attacks aimed at his “particular brand of religious emotionalism and his specialized method of selling religion.” He noted, however, that he was invited here by the Anglican church and that high-ranking Anglican churchmen are leaders in his crusade. r - “News Day,” a new weekly magazine published in the Sydney suburb of Ashfield, carried in its first issue a story headlined “Billy Go Home.” “Billy -Graham, the self-appoint-ed heavenly huckster, should pack his carpetbag and go straight back home,” Nejvs Day said “Thoughtful Australians will be horrified by the near blasphemy of his attitude. The voice of God doesn't come bellowing from a loudspeaker.” Another criticism came from the Anglican archbishop of Goulburn and Canberra. Dr. E.H. Burgmann. In his diocesan magazine, the Southern Churchman, Dr. Burgmann wrote: “I cannot go along with a modern ‘fundamentalist’ crusade such as is qow being conducted Billy Graham. Great crowds do not provide the atmosphere for serious decisions involving the truths vital for meeting the strain of daily living.”

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