Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 95, Decatur, Adams County, 22 April 1959 — Page 3
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1959
Bill Os Rights Is Urged For Union Members
WASHINGTON (UPD _ Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) today urged approval of a far-ranging “bill of rights” for union members to sharpen the teeth of.the Senate's labor reform measure. The rackets committee chairman planned to call up the proposal as the first in his series of amendments aimed at toughening the anti-corruption bill sponsored by Sen.s John F. Kennedy (DMass.) and Sam J. Ervin (DJJ.C.) Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.l, leading opponent of the bill, said he thought McClellafi would “have very good backing” and cut into the stroffg support which Kennedy got in two votes Tuesday. Defeats Amendments In these votes, initial tests of strength on the labor reform issue, the Senate: —Defeated 67-27 an attempt led by Ervin to eliminate Taft-Hart-ley law revisions which AFL-CIO leaders demanded if they were to support the bill. —Rejected 67-24 a proposal by Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen (III.) to substitute the administration's Taft - Hartley law changes for the milder revisions sought by labor. The administration proposals would have clamped on secondary boycotts and picketing to organize workers. McClellan has announced plans to offer his own amendment to block secondary boycotts, by which unions bring indirect pressure on employers through approaches to firms dealing with them. Kennedy Confident He also has prepared an amendment to ban organizational picketing, which Labor Secretary James P. Mitchell has described as a device to “blackmail” employers into signing contracts for union representation of their workers. The administration has favored inclusion of both provisions in the labor reform measure but has indicated opposition to McClellan's proposed “bill of rights,” as complex, unwieldy, and difficult to administer. Kennedy said he expected the biggest floor fights to come cm the boycott and picketing issues. But he stuck to his prediction that he Senate would leave his -bill intact. Other congressional news:, - Economy: Congressional ' GOP leaders met with President Eisenhower in a freshly optimistic belief that their mounting fight for his budget is taking hold against the Democrats. It was expected in advance of the White House meeting that the agenda would cover the whole legislative situation, with emphasis on the budget. Luce: Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn.) said it would be a “disservice" to the nation for the Senate to reject Clare Boothe Luce as ambassador to Brazil because of statements she made in political campaigns. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is scheduled to vote Thursday on the nomination. Dodd, in a speech prepared tor Senate delivery, said that if Mrs. Luce were rejected because of her political statements the Senate would be “foreclosing the field of diplomacy to almost all who engage in political life.” Passports: The House Committee on Un-American Activities continued hearings into proposals to give the State Department more discretion in withholding and issuing passports. It called in for questioning William Lorenzo Patterson of New Hork, named as manager of the Communist Sunday Worker.
20 Years Ago Today o —— 77® April 22, 1939—A catfish weighing slightly more than 12 pounds was reported caught in the St. Mary’s river by Albert Aeschliman, of this city. The Monroe township Sunday Sunday school convention will be held at the Cross Reformed church in Berne April 30, with David Hogg, Fort Wayne, former congressman, as the speaker. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Neering are convinced it pays to advertise. One hour after the Daily Democrat was published, carrying a notice of lost Boston bull terrier, the, prized animal was returned to them. The alley between the Cort theater and the Brock building is being relaid.
QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING All Work Left Before Noon on ThursdayReady the Next Day, Friday, at HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
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I Dianne Linn Heads Democratic Women Miss Dianne Linn, of Decatur, 1 was elected president of the Ad- ■ ams county Democratic Women's I club at a supper meeting Tuesday night at Berne. ! Other new officers are: first vice president, Mrs. Carl Sprunger, of Berne; second vice presi- '
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4ent, Mrs. Pqul Stably, of Berov; secretary, Mrs. Walter Fenstermaker, of Geneva: treasurer, Mrs. Frank Bohnke. jof Decatur. Severin H. Schurger, prosecuting attorney of Adams county, spoke to the group on the early history of the prosecutor’s office, and the types of crime prevalent in Adams county 100 years ago. The accordionettes, Darlene Smitley and Kathy Grjle, played “Just Because,” '“Ripples of the Allegheny,” “If You Know tHe Lord,” and “At the Race.”
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIAHA
Miss Rose NeSswald presided at the meeting. The letter of resignation as president of Mrs. Gerald Vizard, submitted last fall, byas read. Dues were raised from 50 cents a year to sl. There were 23 present at the carry-in supper. NEW ELECTION €onllnued from page one Miriam Hall. The statements were read into the city council minutes, and will be presented in full in Thursday’s Decatur Daily Democrat.
Hold Sanity Hearing For Confessed Killer DETROIT (UPD — A sanity hearing will be held for an escaped mental patient who admitted strangling the 5-year-old son of a deaf-mute couple. , * Police were expected to Seek a first degree murder warrant against George Ritola, 47, who
expressed no regrets over e the death of little Marvin Zdanowski. Prosecutor Samuel Olsen, said he would grant the warrant "so we can get a sanity commission to examine him.” r " Ritola said he grabbed Marvin Monday morning as the boy was on his way to kindergarten at the nearby Logan School. He said he strangled the boy for 10 minutes — “it takes that long”—and did his body in the loft of a garage. , Ritola saifl he killed Marvin because “the electronics people and
i the government had about a . thousand spies on me for the last I four years and pressures have > been building up inside me. i “The boy is a martyr. He was their innocent tool. He was an i innocent victim.” > The killer was arrested on a tip : early Tuesday at his sister’s ! apartment where he had been - hiding for seven months since > fleeing the Galesburg, 111., state hospital last September. ■ Marvin and his parents, Mr. * and Mrs. Daniel Zdanowski, lived
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in the apartment next door. Ritola said he hdd been planning to kill the small boy for a month because “pressures” had been building up inside him. He said the “pressures” were “half relieved” after the killing. He also said he had planned to kill two other little boys who lived in the building “but they moved away and that left only Marvin.” Trade in a good town — Decatur.
