Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 12 March 1959 — Page 14
PAGE SIX-A
Study Benson Policy With Credit Corp.
WASHINGTON (UPD—The Senate Agriculture Committee has quietly begun a study of Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson’s policies in the Commodity Credit Corp.—the agency which handles price support and storage programs. Informed sources reported a Senate investigator was ordered .to take a preliminary look at the agency, opening the way for what could be a full-scale Senate hearing later. • In the House, a subcommittee headed by Rep. Paul" C. Jones (D-Mo.) plans to open an investigation along the same lines March 24. He said he has information the government is paying commercial storage firms more than 16 cents per bushel a year to store grain, and that grain can be stored on farms for 6 to 7 cents a bushel. s WASHINGTON (UPD—Officials of the National Farmers Union were called to the witnews stand today at a House agriculture subcommittee’s hearings on new wheat legislation. The Farmers Union testimony supports bills which would set up separate support and quota programs for each major class of wheat. In general, the farm group doesn't want Congress to do anything that would reduce the income of wheat farmers. WASHINGTON (UPD—Moisture supplies are generally adequate to .excessive east of the Mississippi River and in the coastal sections of Texas, the Agriculture Department said in..its monthly crop
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report. Subsoils in the Great Plains have favorable moisture supplies, although surface soils are dry in much of the northern and southern portions, the department said. It added that normal spring precipitatioj| should provide adequate moisture in most localities. Recent shows in the western mountains brightened runoff prospects, but snowpack is below usual, especially at the higher elevations. Irrigation water supplies from direct diversion of stream flow seem likely to be short, particularly in the southern Rocky Mountains, but reservoir carryover supplies generaully are favorable. The department said unseasonably warm February weather in Florida benefited immature citrus, but forced rapid growth and lowered the quality of winte vegetables. Winter wheat is beginning to emerge from dormancy and appears to have wintered well, the department said. WASHINGTON (UPD—The Agriculture Department said today 5.656,000 persons were working on farms during the survey week of Feb. 15-21. This included 4.507,000 farm operators and their families, and 1,059,000 hired hands. Total term employment during the survey week was about equal to a year earlier, but about 8 per cent below the average for five most recent years. The number of all workers increased 7 per cent over the January survey week,- which probably marked the year’s low point in farm work. WASHINGTON (UPD—Agric-ul-
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- r I r ■ U 1 fl r TH w. CANDY-VACCINE —Thirteen-month-cld David Van Horn Likes the cherry flavor at a new, one-dose oral polio vaccine being tested at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. Some 115 married university students, their wives and children are in the tests. ture Department economists predict that government payments to wool growers will go up sharply The payments are made to cover the gap between market prices and the support level of 62 cents a pound. Payments made this year will cover wool marketed in 1958. Since market prices were low in the 1958 season, government payments may go as high as 75 million dollars this year. These payments never went above 52 million dollars in the three earlier years of the wool payment program. -
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THE' DECATUH DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Ghosts Os Past Haunts People Os Germany By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Editor FRANKFURT, Germany (UPD —A ghost of Germany past has come back to haunt the people* of Germany present. German courts are not exactly full these days of cases involving anti-Semitism, but there are enough of them to disturb both government and Jewish leaders alike. There is not even proof that there is more anti-Semitism here than in many other places in the world. But because of the past, the recent rash of anti-Semitic occurrences in West Germany has sent a chill up the German spine and brought new guarantees from Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. Adenauer, in an interview with West Germany’s only Jewish newspaper, declared that the German people sad reacted with disgust to events of the Nazi era end that this fact could not be invalidated by isolated acts of antiSemitism. Will Not Repeat Policy He added that the policy of the Nazi regime toward the Jews had
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brought disgrace on “all of us" end would not be repealed. Adenauer's reference was to the six millton Jews who died in the gas chambers or by worse means under the regime of Adolf Hitler, and to the government’s present determination to re-integrate West* Germany’s remaining 30,000 Jews into West German life. Most West Germans seem to approach the problem today with the grim fascination of a man drawn irresistibly to the edge of a cliff. He doesn’t want to go there, but he does anyway. There is no chance that the West German will be allowed to forget the atrocities of the Hitler regime. Ln the pleasant little town of Dachau a few miles from Munjsh, the gas chambers still stand as a grim memorial, as do others throughout Germany. Laws Against Anti-Semitism Written into the constitution of the West German republic are laws against anti-Semitism. Arxi the laws are enforced. Here are a few recent cases: A Bavarian sanatorium attendant who said he'd volunteer for duty in death camps if they were reopened — three months in jail. A textile salesman who said that the Jews should be wiped out —seven months in jaU. Two officials in the state of Hesse reparations office who allegedly sang anti-Semitic songs and made anti-Semitic statements in dieir office— suspended from their poets pending investigation. A Frankfurt state’s attorney who allegsdly made anti-Semitic
remarks — suspended pending investigation.
Suspend Teachers A teacher who cast doubt on the authenticity of the Anne Frank diaries — suspended pending investigation. These cases, and others like them, tend to throw a harsher light on events here than elsewhere where there are no such laws. There are those here, including some Jewish leaders, who believe that so much attention may only encourage other inci-, dents. Others feel that even stronger counter-measures should be taken and that new means should be found to impress upon a new generation of German youth the inhumanities and ultimate failure of Nazism — that today’s nightmare from yesterday should not become the reality of tomorrow. Don't Tempt 'Em MOSCOW (UPD—Soviet novelists have been advised not to obstruct the government campaign against alcoholism by writing with relish about drinking at banquets and parties. An article in the Literary Gazette bade them follow the example of the late American writer Jack London—" His ’John Barleycorn’ cannot be perused- without a shudder.” The Netherlands produces six billion flower bulbs each year on only 21,000 acres.
———-T— I * 4K •1 Jf j 71. r*! 8" tWIoBhl J '■ A. ' * ’ t; y KraH SHE FORGIVES—Back on the Ml of "The .Unforgiven’’ in Durango. Mexico, actress Audrey Hepburn pets the horse that threw Her.a month ago. Back injuries she received prevent Miss Hepburn from working more than three hours a day. The number of accidental deaths in the United States during 1958 was about 92,000 according to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., which said this was a reduction of approximately 3,000 from 1957 and the smallest number for any yw since 1954.
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1959
Cultural Agency Urged
NEW YORK (UP)—Creation d a permanent agency to foster music and the performing arts is being urged for New York State. The request was made to Gov. Nelson A. RockefeUer by Al Manuti, president of local 802, American Federation of Musicians, and seconded by Hally Sosnik, wellknown orchestra leader. Sosnik said that "for some mysterious reason.” Federal, state and local governments in this country have never really given official encouragement to the arts. “ as a result, there are many cultural areas in which we are woefully behind the Russians, Italians, the French, the Germans, and other nationalities who have had the benefits of official aid and encouragement in their artistic endeavors.” More than two million pounds of dog foods were consumed by the nation’s 26 million dogs last year.
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