Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 114, Decatur, Adams County, 13 May 1960 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

National Science Winners Listed

fMtMANAF<»I.« 'UPt' — Top ffuiUn official* umtobt »U> P« r toe, to award* to >< Un* and aw gi»' »•*’ **fo **’ nrtt df ArrnOri fiorvUW* (fobprUUpa •< H»* IIU» NkUunal fictobcr Fair.

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> Two bort, J*mr» Kirk Ream Uirtt IT t-ofajHlr. Ind and ltol»I aid F, C.rpmnicr It Went Mart .' ford. Coma. rartt won thro* of for award* and J«tw> Martin ('■>»*• I, Jr, It. AltoWtoe, Ala • *'* <*° Twelve winner* at health award* rocehfod their rstata'A* ITborfoay night and hoard a tali hr Dr. John Furbay of ’hr fr>»Utuie <4 World Trade and the Strategic Intelligence School. Wa*htngtan. D C. In addHroA. appr»>«imatelr 100 award* will ba announced for the tint tune tonight The** arc "•tah" prize* valued at about MMO and corolrt of rquipmant book* and other Item* the young •cienUit* have indicated tbev moat want Dr Paul A Stpk. president of the American Geographer* and a .cientiftc adviMjr lor military re i March. will apeak at tonight* banquet The fair end* Saturday morning with the diamanUing of 356 elaborate exhibit* and a homeward trip for the future acteatiau. Bramblett* award* were for hit ultraviolet flying spot micro•cope designed tor the detailed study of living cells . Carpenter won his three awards for an experiment in aerodynamics and thermodynamic* m a cnunterOow vortex tube. Cone had as Ms project a dielectric pump, a type of pump having no moving parts. Top award winners In the health section included Brenda Lisle, 16, Chattanooga. Tenn., and Philip C Bookman. TO. Grand Rapids. Mich Miss Lisle was co-winncr with Bockman of the top American Medical Association award for an experiment showing the effects of radiation on chick embryos. Bockman won for Ms exhibit of a tendon fashioned of stainless steel and sponge Norma Jean Ayers .17. Powell. Tenn , and Richard Komorowski. 17, Milwaukee. Wis.. won honor(able mention citations Top winners also were announced in several other divisions. Shelia Marie Most. 15, Gulfport. I Fla . and Donald F. Kearney. 17, [Warwick. R 1.. *’ on American 'Dental Association superior (achievement certificates for their exhibits. Miss Most won for her study of natural fluoridation of water and Kearney for an investigation of plastics versus metals as dental materials. Robert D. Towe, 17. Bozeman, Mont, won the American Veterinary Medical Association award for a study of the effect of increased water consumption on uninarv irtofofc in rats, and Eugene L. Diveglia. 17, Hartsburg, Pa., 1 was top winner of the American I Pharmaceutical Association Award with a study on the treatment of cancer by drugs. Mary Sue Wilson, 16, Cedar

Slow Warm-up Is - Forecast In Stale toNeg Fwoa biteewatoma’ Tkmfgrafotr* *»o> c«port«d to U«M into the •>* over mo*t of tn. .Urte today and the 7th tel 4 rdax a* a warm-up cfofonuad tn Indian* By buMlay the mercury may ovm rite into the MM. although th* Weather Buraau *aant qo»u «o »po*tfW ft merely **d foe day win M fair sad warm ” High* ranging from Si so 66 were dur foi* aftorm«<o and from • to N fiaturday, After four fotya as maximum tn itw* the nwwcvry finally edged into the 30* and low flO* around the alate TMit»day eacept at Fort Wayne, where the top temperature wa* • Kvan»(villa'* •! wa* the highr»t But the mercury crawled back down tot., the MM Un* morning, hitting SJ-frcexing at Lafayette. 33 iat South Bend and Fort Wayne and M at Evanavtlle. A little more than one-tenth of an inch of rain wa* recorded in the extreme eartern edge of the *talc. including Fort Wayne and Ute Cincinnati area. No further rain was expected in Hooelerland before Monday, when »hower» totaling around one-haU loch <rf precipitation were expectid U> start a twoday run For the Bve-day period ending next Wednesday, temperature* i were expected to average near normal to 3 degree* above normal 1 high* of 68 to TO and normal ' low* of 46 to 60 After the warming trend reaches a peak Sunday it will torn cooler about Tuesday and Wednesday. the outlook said

Falls. lowa, and Alan P Bloeibaum. 18 Austin. Tex , won sec- ■ ondary awardi in the dental division; Frederick A Dombrosc. 115. Okemos. Mich., in the veteriI narv division, and Shannon Wells. 17, Bethany. Okla., in the pharmacy division Navy awards and invitations to take a naval cruise went to Harry C Brown Jr.. 16. Clinton. Miss; Donald F. Carpenter. 16. West Hartford. Conn; Roman Ohnemus, 17. Tallahassee. Fla.: Ikivaf Bell. 16 Albuquerque. N.M.. John Cones Jr.. 16. Anniston, Al a; James Bramblett. 17. Lafayette, Ind: and Carlos Ramiriz, 15, Mayaguez, P R. Army science awards or a trip to the Army Ballistic Agency at Huntsville, Ala., went to Bockman; Carpenter; Bramblett. Cone; Joe Candy Jr.. 17, Alva, Okla.; Donald Shapero, 18, Palo Alto, Calif; Michael Lowe, 16, Dickinson, Tex., and Marvin Hutt, 16, New York. ,Air Force science^ a wards and a trip to the Ballistic Research, Laboratory at Aberdeen, Md, went to Bramblett; Carpenter; Larry Owen, 18, Nixa, Mo.; Gerald Birdwell, 18, Eagle Lake, Tex: and Barbara Dymond, 16, Fleetville, Pa.

YU DKATVa foWLT l—OrfilT. COCAWB. I—BBI

Cables Under Atlantic Cut Mysteriously WANKINGTUN <UFI*-4kMM uh<3rrwatrr cable* cfW**tog th* Al Unlit haw bwn cut my*torla»ul> • m recent month* while Aunaton fl*King w*»el* torfod *u*ptelOU*ly BHftr high U t Mblllgtmcw of flcial have diaelnood They al*o hinted that the Unit (ed Stole* had uncovered Bnvfot icaptonage activity to foU country during the pa*t two year*, tot that the caaa* never were made public foe one rea*ob or nnogbeg. Officini* *aid the cable cutting incident* al»o had not been |mbj Ucuod prevtoualy They gave no i reason* tor keeping the ea*ee arThe diactooure* by US. InteUi I gence source* Thursday came in the wake of the downing of a IUS »py plane deep inside Ru**i* : May 1 The tort known cable Incident was in February. TOM. *^ n crewmen from a Navy radar (picket boat boarded foe Ru**i*n ! tr®wlcr off Newfoundland They found no proof of kc(tiviUe* other than fishing The Soviet Union formally proI tested the boarding and the United State* replied there wa* * ' strong presumption the trawler had broken five underwater cai bles.

Find Man’s Body In River At Anderson ANDERSON. Ind. <UPD — Awl thorities sought today to unravel I a mrstery posed by discovery of a man s body in White Riven northwest of here Thursday afj-l ernoon. „ Officials tried to identify the body. They also tried to determine if the man drowned or was shot. TTiey wanted to know if foul play was involved. * George Cunningham. Anderson, notified police th tit he saw the man floundering in the river as he drove by. Cunningham said he tried to rescue the man but the. current pulled him out of reach. By the time police recovered ■ the body several hours later file man was dead. . There was a bullet in the head behind the right ear. Sgt. Charles Epperson of the Indiana State Police detective force said the location of the bullet wound indicated *fc<*-_<npn-l>ad not shot himself.. was scheduled this morning to determine cause of death. . The man was w to 70 years old. No missing persons answering his description were reported Fingerprints were sent to She FBI in Washington in an attempt at identification. Authorities said the man’s head and hands bore bruises. They said the body was clad in overalls and a work shirt. There was a pocket knife and a piece of string in the pockets but no money or identification papers. Official Returns On Indiana's Primary INDIANAPOLIS ’UPD — Final official returns from the Indiana presidential preference primary showed today that'Spn. John F. Kennedy got more votes than President Eisenhower did in 1956. Eisenhower's total of a little more than 352,000 was topped by j Kennedy’s 353,832. The official returns gave Vice President Richard M. Nixon 409,408, a margin of 54.576 over Kennedy in their “popularity contest.” Nixon’S only opponent. Indianapolis Negro attorney Frank Beckwith. received 19,677. Kennedy’s opponents. John Hugh Latham with 42,084 and Lar Daly with 40,853, had a combined total of 82.937. The Democratic presidential ballots totaled 436,769, or 8.684 more than the Republican total of 428,085.

Kendallville Plans Foi* Summer School Seven courses will be offered at summer school June 13 to August 10 at Kendallville this year, R. W. Aritch. principal, has announced. To be offered are psychology, sociology. American Literature, speech, driver education, advanced biology, and typing. Summer sessions are state-supported. A total of 42 students enrolled at Kendallville last year.

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Plan Modifications For All Electras Ht unAMK CeW «UF!»~-U*fo Mwd bate, rioter modification »«<»*» hr «!j Rtertr* alrUeert to Muur« «g*lA»< cradwa «imltar ► !•” Mr tiix.tet* <Mf ctalmed •• »w« *hr« U» ptaMM* WlM* MtaPP»d off el Mfh kteod Hut wfte wffl P«y hr the modihi attoM —• •aumatad ■< gear* than l» mllltort dollar. for each ,4 thr >N hur jmip-jet plane* I nt** to »rrvtra* U«kh««<l did o»< talk about ft* I naikrtog too modlftcattan* Thur »■ 4a y «H»cn It bald 0 day-tong mrrV img with repraaMHallObO •/ ®0 anlinr* Airline Fttot* Aaan . go* emmrat avtatate afeocte* a«d technical p««Hdr A»kcd today about who would pav for the change*. I/wkheed had a Hat fin comment " At the M-Mton LreWteed sofa lU 2H mUHna dollar te»t program of the Kto. traa following the Tel! I City, lad. and Buffalo. Tax. cra»be« showed the wing* of Utoh , plane* .napped The builder of the flve-mtllton-dollar airplane aaid the ergabe* uniki not have been caused by 'high speed alone, but had to be coupled with structural damage to the outboard engine bousing A* explained by Lockheed engineer M. C. Haddon, the cra»be» occurred when: The outboard engine began to wobble at high speed because of some structural break in the engine mounting or housing The wobble was, in turn, transmitted along the wing and the extra force of the wobble caused the wing to flutter and then snap like a dry stick during high speed flight.

Opposes Change In Assembly Sessions INDIANAPOLIS <UPI> — Indiana must choose between keeping its Legislature at the present 61-day length or accepting delegation of some authority to state department and agency heads, tn view of Sen Wendell Martin. Martin, an Indianapolis Republican who was president pro tern of the 1950 Senate, told a meeting of the Committee on Rules Regulations of State AgenC, "As long as the lawmakers set the standards, we have done the job. If the Legislature is going to continue at 61 days — and I hope it will—we do have to delegate some of these minor deMartin said an opinion received by the committee earlier today from Atty. Gen. Edwin K. Steers substantiated his view. _ In the opinion. Steers held that the Legislature, or a body created bv the Legislature, may be made an approving authority for rules or regulations adopted vy any state agency. Steers noted, however, that such delegation of rule making power must be accompanied by retention of legislative control Martin told the committee that in his opinion there now are sufficient safeguards against abuse by bureaus, departments and agencies of their rule making ausome Legislatures have expressed* alarm,” Martin said, • but I am not aware of any abuses It seems to me youi can t have the "Shears the decisions it did Iw years ago."

Indiana Statehouse Little U.N. Today _ INDIANAPOLIS (UPD - The Indiana Statehouse was a ‘ little United Nations” today. Eight rtiembers of an agricultural delegation from Brazil, a Rhodesian and a 20-year-old Japanese girl substituting for her country's ambassador visited Governor Handley today. The Brazilions, including a girl home economist, and the Rhodesian, are on a trip during which they hope to learn how North Americans teach agriculture to their children as a vocational sub- 1 ject. All are school officials in their own countries. The farm group also conferred with Lt. Gov. Crawford Parker, who is Indiana commissioner of agriculture. Prof. Philip Teske of the Purdue University School of Agriculture is guide for the group during its Indiana tours which will continue to May 26. The Japanese girl, Miss Sakiko Kanamori, of Kochi, will represent her country in a tree-plant-ing ceremony tomorrow at Lin-] coin Park. She has been in the United States for eight mdnths as a student at Hope College, Mich., where she is studying for a career in church music. Vehicles Sideswipe East Os Decatur Thursday afternoon on UA 224 one-fourth mile east of Decatur* a car driven by Alvin E. Hackman, 19. 226 N. 9th and a truck driven by Anthony Arens, 19, Bremer Road. New Haven, sideswiped. Hackman s car was damaged to the extent of

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Attend Conference Os Social Workers A half-dozen or more Decatur area people will attend the northeast Indiana regional conference on social work in Fort Wayne next Thursday. Miss Bernice Nelson. Adams county welfare director. said today. Interested persons are invited and encouraged to attend. Mist Nelson added, and those desiring to go should contact the welfare office far further, information Attending from •the Adams county department of public welfare are Mbs Neison Mrs Mary Strickler, Mrs Mabel Marthall. Miss Wlnefride Kitaon. and Miss Janet Brown. Mrs. Wanda OeL berg and other representatives of the Adams county chapter of the American Red Croat are also planning to attend. Surveying The M’s Theme for the conference will be "Surveying the 60s and will deal with the changes in health and welfare problems which communities can* anticipate in the next decade. Professional and lay leaders from 12 Northeast Indiana counties will be attending, E. David DeVoe, conference chairman, adfor the Fort Wayne conference wiU begin at I a jn. in the* WagenhalA iftan of Trinity English Lutheran church/ Fort Wayne and EwifigT stfhets Following the registration there will tje a panel presentation, of "Children and Youth in the 60s” —a report on the White House conference. ■ 4 Conference Report Dealing with reports from the recent White House conference on children and youth called by President Eisenhower, panel members will include Margaret Ann Keegan, a board member of the Fort Wayne child guidance cen- 1 ter; Leon Fisher, executive director of the Fort Wayne family and children’s service; and Paul Philips, a board member of the child welfare league of America. Moderator for the panel will be James Mallon, director of the children’s bureau bf Indianapolis. AU participants were delegates to the White House conference from Indiana. Principal speaker of the conference wiU be Harold W. Kramer, regional executive officer, department of health, education and welfare, Chicago regional office, who wiU talk on “Surveying the 605.” Kramer’s talk will follow the conference dinner held at the Shrine Auditorium, Ewing and West Berry streets. United Fund Speech

Following the speaker there will be a group discussion led by Kenneth Pommerenck, executive secretary of the United Chest-Coun-cil, Allen county. Other members of the conference planning committee serving under DeVoe include Miss Freida Buriss, Miss Ann Doran and Mrs.

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Daiglau of the Allen e»xmty department at public welfare. Mim Bernice Netoon. Adam* county DPW. Mlsa Jeanette Simmon*. Well* county DPW; Miss Fiori dene Snyder. Fort Wayne Lutheran aortal earvice*; Elbert Tingley. Weeteid* neighborhood center. Fort Wayne; Uoyd Allen. Allen county community coordinating center; and Robert Hartford. Fort Wayne state school. The conference i* open to the public. There is a 50-cent registration fee far an peraon* who are not members of the state conference of social work. DeVoe said

Resume Planting Os Largest Com Crop CHICAGO (UPD —After nearly; a week’s delay due to bad weath- 1 er. the nation’s farmers moved back into their fields today to resume planting the largest corn crop in history. I Wind - driven rains, unseastmal cold, floods—even snow in aome; places—almost completely bogged down plowing and planting in the Corn Belt, according to government and private crop reports. Progress ranged form virtually nothing in Nebraska to 25 per cent complete in Ohio. In a few areas, farmers had barely begun plowing thffr flekls when the weather hit Orourtu’ in other places was often too cold and wet tor planting where plowing was finished. And snow fell in parts of Minnesota. The crop made good progress outside the Corn Belt, however. Missouri reported 23 per cent of its planting done. Kansas and Oklahoma completed 40 per cent and some southern areas were more than half done.

But in the belt itself, where 90 per cent of the nation’s corn is grown, many farmers spent the

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week oUlng their ™ watching the rain-pelted fields from indoor*.

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