Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 96, Decatur, Adams County, 23 April 1959 — Page 9

THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1959

New Marvel Os Rome Emerging Near City )- By DANIEL F. GILMORE .. United Press International ROME (UPI)A new marvel of Rome is emerging like a phoenix from the ashes of a good dream of Mussolini. A little more than five miles south of the city, but still part of this proud and ancient commune, a new, vast and breathtaking complex of marble building and stately avenues is already in being. Romans themselves who have

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not been out to the former sheep pastures for years are amazed at what they see. This is "EUR,” the Universal Exposition of Rome. In 1935, Mussolini announced that he would build an historic complex of permanent marblefaced buildings for an “olympiad of civilization” which was to be opened in 1942. Ground was broken and the gigantic task begun. War Came Along Plans called for exposition buildings as large as railroad stations; not “jerry-built” to last one season, but built like the Colosseum to last for ages. Marble columns as long as 25 feet and as thick as a work horse

were hauled from quarries. An obelisk was found of the many in Rome to grace the central square. Massive statues were brought irt. »■ / Then came the war. The great olympiad ot culture was forgotten while the world bled. Only a few curious German and then Allied soldiers ever wandered out to the weed-grown site to stare at the abandoned massive statue heads and slabs of marble, great foundations and debris. Resumed Work In 1952 Italy had no time to think of the place in/ the difficult days after the war. But in 1952 a plan was elab-

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

orated to finish the work and turn the quarter into a permanent world exposition center, museums, government offices and restful gardens. 3/ Most people smiled when the Rome government also decided to finish another Mussolini dream—a subway. It was finished in 1954, a mar-ble-lined gem of construction running under the historic ruins of Rome from the central station out to the “EUR”—which was then nowhere and nothing but sheep still grazed. It was a pleasant ride into the country. Today EUR is practically completed. Snow Window Os The World It looks like a movie set until vou see that solid marble.

A Swiss corporation, entirely privately financed, for the development of international trade has taken over four of dozens of magnificent palaces and is making it a “show window of the world.” The palaces have lofty halls whose average height varies from ,18 to 36 feet. A total of 400,000 square feet in the palaces is divided into 126 exhibition halls. They can take anything from a wristwatch display to a jet airliner. / This part is “permindex”—the permanent industrial exhibitions. Permindex will be open for business this summer and to exhibitors of all nations, all year.

House-Cleaning ' SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPD-Mrs. Beverly Goodnow told police the following items were mising from her apartment when she returned from a two-weeks’stay with relatives: A coach, a chair, two end tables, two lamps, a coffee taljle, a bed, spring and mattress, a dresser, a kitchen table and four chairs, a television set, a radio, a phonopraph and six rugs. Marine worms exported from Maine as bait for sport fishermen bring in more per pound than lobsters do.

West Nations Divided On Basic Issues By PHU NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor On May 11, in Geneva, Switzerland, the foreign ministers of the United States, Britain, France and Russia are scheduled to begin their conference paving the way to a session at the summit. It would be a sad day for the West if the conference were to start tomorrow. For the West scarcely ever has been more divided on basic issues than now. Should the situation continue, it would fulfill a prediction made by the late Soviet Premier Josef Stalin. Shortly after World War 11, Stalin wrote that a war between the Soviet Union and the West was much less likely than a split among the Western powers, brought about by their own conflicting interests. The present division among the Western powers arises from questions dealing with the future of Germany and is less a question of conflicting interests than one of conflicting ideas about how the German issue should be settled with the least risk of war. Use Dividing Tactics Meanwhile, the Soviets are grimly pursuing their usual di-vide-and-conquer tactics against the Western Allies and filling the air with accusations which later will become part of their arguments at the conference table. In the space of two weeks, the Soviets have: —Accused the United States of deliberately trying to torpedo the foreign ministers conference by insisting on maintaining high altitude flights alsh the air corridors to Berlin. * —Warned Norway that NATO bases on Norwegan soil endanger the peace. —Continued their stalling tactics at the Geneva nuclear conference where agreement is being sought to ban tests of nuclear weapons and set up an international inspection system which would guaranty its being carried out. West At Odds It may be predicted with some confidence that other similar tactics are in the cards which the Russians will play before the foreign ministers sit down to their Geneva conference. Meanwhile, even without Russia’s disruptive tactics, the Western powers continue at odds. West Germany’s vacationing Chancellor Konrad Adenauer recently used words against Britain which one commentator described as words usually reserved for an enemy. The British accuse the German reunification, while the British, in the words of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, seek: “Pacification by negotiation and reasonable agreement.” Before “pacification” between even the British and Germans is achieved, another meeting may be necessary between Macmillan and Adenauer. Criticize U.S. Flights At the same time, criticism in the British press of the high altitude U.S. flights in the German corridors has been almost as strong as that carried by Pravda, the Communist Party newspaper in Moscow. It became so strong that last week the U.S. State Department took pains to make clear that he flights had the approval of the entire U.S. government and were not just the decisions of a few U.S. generals. There are only two real questions so far as Germany is concerned. The Allies already have expressed their determination not to be driven from Berlin by Russian threats. So the next move seems up to Russia. The next question deals with the terms and conditions by which it may be possible to reunify Germany. The present bickering only contributes to Russian diplomatic initiative.

■ jihii, n. 1 ■ • w Jx j A ** n ' Iji .\. wM ✓ / fl£ : ’ IB fl COURTED—This couple is Martha Josephine Black, 25, daughof U. S. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, and Dr. Mario Pesaresi, 31, in New York as they announced they would be married "this summer.” She is a psychiatric social worker and he is a resident psychiatrist at Gotham’s Mount Sinai hospital.

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'■ < i- MW •- ..... < < ■:< i-'*. .■** > ■ "s/. '■ ■■■■ <4 Will, FINALLY— Mrs. Irene Henderson Kelly, 67, hospitalized in Salina, Kan., by a fall, smiles after being picked as “Kansas Mother of the Year,” thus ending a great big booboo. By mistake, 40 Kansas mothers had been mailed congratulatory notices by the American Mothers committee." But now it’s all over. “To tell the honest truth, I really thought I’d get it," said Mrs. Kelly, referring to efforts of the Kansas Federation of Business and Professional Women’s clubs which supported her. If I Had the Wings... LANSING, Mich, tJPD—The stool pegeons really have wings at one Michigan prison. Tipped off by the excitement among pigeons on a roof at the lonia Reformatory, guards captured two 19-year-old inmates as they were about to jump to freedom. A Girl, at Last GARDNER, Mass. (UPD—For the first time in 84 years, “it’s a girl” in the Kendall family. Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Kendayy recently became parents of a daughter—the first girl born in the husband’s family since 1875. The year 1958 was the first since 1949 during which no single disaster in the U.S. claimed as many as 100 lives.

FREE! We Witt Give This Beautiful *IOO Artcarved Diamond Ring To Some Lucky Person At The DECATUR MERCHANTS SHOWCASE Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday MAY 5,6, 7 ? Beloved by Bride* for over 100 years One Os The largest Selections of World Famous ARTCARVED Diamond & Wedding RINGS In Indiana WWWWWWWWNWMN “RINGS THROUGH THE AGES” We Will Have On Display - - Replicas of World Famous Wedding Rings SUCH AS: • Ancient Hebrew • Martin Luther • Mary Queen of Scott • And Many Others BOIR JEWELRY STORE k Authorized ArtMrreJ lewder d