Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 69, Decatur, Adams County, 23 March 1959 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
■ h\-.,-wjjrfw. ■ ■"'■' - '■ « i -M * *' x ' ■. R| ' ' BV . y x\\ K & •' - Suk ; In ’ *™L ' Aw^WEK., Wk; ' ■MKsEfr - READY FOR EASTER PARADE - Bonnie, a three-year-old toy poodle, is all set for the Easter parade in Chicago, 111. Trying an Easter basket for size, the pooch models a new straw hat.
Warmer Weather Moves Into State UrJted Press International Sunny and mild weather today brought a springlike quality to Indiana after a cold weekend. Temperatures were-, expected to hit highs ranging from the upper 50s to the low 60s this afternoon. While mild weather will remain Tuesday, it will cool off in the extreme north and warm up in the extreme south with a range from around 50 to the Upper 60s. No rain was expected until Tuesday night or Wednesday, when scattered showers and thundershowers were due. Later in the week, around Saturday, more rain will fall, and the total for the week will- be around half an inch. Cold temperatures prevailed Sunday. The mercury moved only a few degrees above freezing over the upper two-thirds of the state and ranged from a top of 36 at Fort Wayr e to a high of 47 at Evansville. Overnight lows today included 24 at Indianapolis and Fort Wayne, 25 at Evansville and 28 at South Bend. The five-day outlook called for temperatures averaging 5 to 6 degrees above normal in the north - Last Time Tonight - Cecil B. DeMUle Hit—Color! “The BUCCANEER” Yul Brynner, Charlton Heston ALSO — Shorts 25c -50 c O—O—Fri. & Sat.—“ Restless Years" John Saxon, Sandra Dee —o Coming Sun.—lngrid Bergman, “Inn of the 6th Happiness"
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and central and near notmal in the extreme south. Nofmal highs are 46 to 61 and normal lows 30 to 40. “Warmer most sections tonight and Tuesday,” the outlook said. “Cooler Wednesday or Thursday, warming again Friday or Saturday." Nasser In Renewed Criticism Os Iraq ' DAMASCUS, Syria (UPD—President Gamal Abdel Nasser saild Sunday the United Arab Republic was prepared to fight a “decisive battle” against Israel five months ago but that the leftist regime in Iraq reneged cn its defense pact with the U.Z.R. Nasser made the statement in a speech in which he renewed his criticism of Iraqi Premier Abdel Karim Kassem and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. A cheering crowd of thousands of Syrians heard him speak in Dam ascus . Nasser said he asked Kassem to Send Iraqi troops into Syria late last year for “decisive battle against Israel when at/ that time Israel was threatening to commit aggression against the U.A.R.” “At the time," he said, “the situation on our border with Israel was tense and we decided if (Israel started aggression we would fight a final battle with her.” Nasser did not make clear whether the refusal of Iraq to send in troops prevented the final battle or whether the reported Israeli aggressions stopped. Nasser, speaking on the 11th anniversary of the Arab League, chided Khrushchev who recently called Nasser "young and impulsive” in his dealings with Arab Communists and Iraq. “Thanks to this hot headedness there are no missile bases aimed at Russia on our territory,” Nasser said. If you u z sometning to sell « rooms . rent, try a Democrat I Want
Sanity Hearing Sei For Mrs. Duncan VENTURA,'CaIif. (UPD—Mrs. Elizabeth Duncan, 54, sentenced to the gas chamber for hiring two men to kill her son’s wife, will appear in Superior Court Tuesday at a hearing to determine her sanity. Judge Charles F. Blackstone, 83-year-old jurist who presided over the trial in which Mrs. Duncan was convicted of the for hire murder of her daughter-in-law, Olga, 30, and the trial in which she was condemned, will make the sanity ruling on the basis of reports by two court-appointed psychiatrists. Three hearings are mandatory in capital punishment cases under California law—the first hearing to determine guilt, the second sentence and the third sanity. Usually the same jury sits in all three hearings, but defense counsel S. Ward Sullivan and Dist. Atty. Roy Gustafson agreed to let Judge Blackstock rule on the sanity issue. Psychiatrists already have testified in the sentencing hearing concluded last Friday that they found Mrs. Duncan was sane last November when she hired Luis Moya, 22. and Augustine Baldonado. 25, with an offer of $6,000 to kill her son s pregnant wife. Both Baldonado and Moya have admitted the Nov. 17 slaying and face trial next month on their pleas of innocent by reason of insanity. i, *i It K ih/i i n \|B~ 11 3 Be • ~~~ ~ * 18 W 1 .001 xlhrlaM "IWw KjA Ata'*- ■■■ wWIRT * ** BSqL HONORED— President Sean T. O’Kelly of Ireland is shown (top) after he received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree at Fordham University, New York. Earlier, O’Kelly (left, tn rear of car) is shown riding up Broadway in tickertape confetti snowstorm.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Castro Urges i Mobilization Os All Cubans HAVANA (UPD—Premier Fidel Castro urged complete mobilization in Cuba, including women and children, to fight off a possible counter-revolutionary invasion from Florida and the Domini- ■ can Republic. Castro told 100,000 labor union mlembers who staged a parade and rally before the presidential palace Sunday that American re actionaries and the international news agencies were sponsoring a campaign to overthrow his regime and return ousted dictator Fulgencio Batista to power. Castro took public exception to the remarks of former President Jose Figueres of Costa Rica who preceded him on the platform and appealed for Latin American solidarity with the United States in the* free world fight against Communist Russia. Castro expressed regret that he disagreed with “our great friend” .—Figueres—who is visiting here as the guest of the Cuban government. “The news agencies have talked more of any one executed war criminal than they have of the 20.000 crimes committed by Batista here,” he said. “What for? To isolate us first and attack us afterward. To deprive us of popular sympathies within the peoples of the continent jnd invade us later from bases in Santo Domingo ‘ (Dominican Republic) or Florida. * . “Everybody must be trained militarily, even the children and women, so that they can defend Jf some expedition decides to come here,” he said. Castro was particularly incensed at “reactionaries” in the United States, who he said were trying to reduce Cuba’s American sugar quota, and the U.S. government, itself. He accused the United States of sending arms to Batista and to the Dominican Republic, “while the FBI has not found a ’single small pistol in the hands of the gangsters.” He also included in his speech an implied threat against the U.S. naval base at Guantamamo. . “While there are military bases of one of these powers (with hydrogen bombs) here and there, the country is preparing for defense and already. has civil war measures and anti-atomic shelters we, who have bases here, do not poSsss one shelter to protect us in case of attack.” •< . Pfc. Jerry Miller Injured In Accident Pfc. Jerry D Miller, son of Mrs. Vivian Miller of 138M> S. Second street, was seriously injured at Fort Eustis, Va.. when he was thrown from a motorcycle recently. Miller suffered a fractured leg and hip, a perforated stomach, and possible concussions. Mrs. Miller, her daughter Donna, and Jackie and Kay Burke left Saturday night, to .visit the injured soldier. His address is Pfc. Jerry D. Miller, RA 16603898, Co. “A” 139th Bis. 1 Boat) Fort Eustis, Va.
> ‘ ■■:'■ ■■ ,1 J I •' ."■ V- m ' JjffiMn dr •/ X ! * !■ « nr .w.> 5 Dr. Frank Shelton (left) of the Armed Force# Special Weapons project and Dr. William J. Thaler, Navy project officer, look at a model of launching vehicle in Pentagon. f ■ ■•— ■ -.- •■••:• ■BT’. • 'FI f* - ! f.£ 1 W a j *- w vHr Jb JK 1 '• - /fe. aWK '■: • - ■’kL c'sx ■«<« Ji Nicholas Christofllos Dr. James A. Van Allen THAT SOUTH ATLANTIC FEAT-Here are four of the scientists whose brains guided the launching of three nuclear devices which were exploded far outside the earth’s atmosphere from the South Atlantic last September. Nicholas Christofilos, 42, whose theories spurred the project, is a selfeducated Greek inventor. He now is with the University of California Atomic laboratory 19 Livermore, Calif. Dr. James A. Van Allen heads lowa State U. Physics department.
j Three Boys Held In Abduction-Robbery RICHMOND, Ind. (UPD-Wayne County authorities held three teenaged boys today in connection with the abduction and robbery of a Dayton, Ohio, taxicab driver Sunday. They were identified as Claude Aker, 19, and his brother, Andy, 18, both of Gates, W. Va., and Ronald Foster, 17, Dayton. The three were accused of forcing cab driver Orville Ash- t wood, 50, at knife-point to drive 1 them from Dayton tc Dublin, Ind. Ashwood said they also robbed nim of $lO. The youths were arrested at Indianapolis when police saw them in another cab en route to Terre Haute. Authorities said Claude Aker was AWOL from Fort Bragg, N.C., and Foster was in an Army uniform, although not in the army. Police said they were armed, with five knives and a razor. if wB I. : 1 GUESS WHO —Behind that magnifying glass is Yul Brynner, and In front of it is a stamp at an exhibition in London. He’s an enthusiastic stamp collector. T . 1 Jr ■ r ■ ■ j LAST LAUGH, MAYBE — Mrs. Elizabeth Duncan, 54, convicted ; ’ of hiring two men to kill her 1 pregnant daughtsr-in-law, rears back With a guffaw in Ventura, Calif., .court during testimony • on which a jury is basing pun- [ ishment decision. At this time • her ex-husband, George Satri- • ano, was telling about “deals” j i while he was married to her
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MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1959
