Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 119, Decatur, Adams County, 19 May 1960 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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THJt nFTATVR DAh.V nKMOTRAT pItCATVR. INDIANA

Corcoran Defends Conduct As Proper WAAHINGTON «UPt '-Uvm j Thoma* G < Thrown Ito (Wk 1 1 CormrMi te.ufird today Itol to ha* torn cmrtartiag mamtof» of I the fMwwf 1 { tHnffilKiflfi I ■tout utllttv ca.e. tor 18 U* I <tor brth Republican and t>m» I Tto one limo New D»M "brwia truater" oow a •*>«» a year tea x? prrfnrtly proper and atovr board IHa told Houaa tafluotoe H»vaaUI gator* ba wo* .urprtud at thi* I •tag. to hear bto frequent FPC contact* ctoracterUed a* map | P *Tto*'nvc«UgaUAg subcommittee |<iurrtam«d Corcoran tor tto we ond day about at! -therecued coo iveraattom he had lad October Iwtth three FPC member* about la pending drci»ko© on the prtitkm. of Midwestern Gut Tran<tTU<M<»n . Cb to build a pipeline from Canada to the Midwest Corcoran inaiated. as he did Wednesday. that in these chat* he did not discuss reason* why Mid western should be allowed a 7 per i cent rate of return on its investment— although he contended to j would have had a legal right to do so if he had desired Five Disc Jockeys Arrested In Payola NEW YORK <UPD — Five disc jockeys who allegedly accepted payola were among seven person* arrested today on a grand jury | information charging commercial bribery All seven were charged with taking graft payments from recording companies and distributors in return for promises to plug recordings. Alan Freed, sometimes called the father of rock n’ roll, was (Charged with 26 counts in two ini formations He was accused of accepting SIO,OOO from a recording ! company in 1958 and with taking 'bribes of $20,650 from six other companies in 1958 and 1959. Freed now is a disc jockey for I station KDAY in Los Angeles. He was fired from WABC-TV in New I York when’he refused to sign a I statement that he had not taken I payola. NATO COUNCIL Com tl n tied from P*<* <m * tension with the West. Before he left. Eisenhower issued a statement in which he expressed confidence that the collapse of the summit conference had welded the Western alliance even closer together the quest for a joint peace. The NAIvJ council ■ backed this up. President Eisenhower, disappointed and disgusted, was the first to leave. He flew off to Portugal for a 24-hour visit before returning to Washington to report to the American people on the diplomatic debacle of the past few daysIn a parting statement at the airport, Eisenhower expressed regret that because of the summit collapse “we could make no progress toward easing the tensions that so plagued mankind.’’ But he added that the setback had unified the Allies —particularly France, Britain and the United States—“even closer than before in determined pursuit of peace with justice in the world. Flies to East Berlin Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, who broke up everything but the furniture in an armwaving, threatening harangues in which he personally insulted Eisenhower and the United States, flew to East Berlin about three hours later. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan arranged to go directly home where he will report to the British House of Commons Friday. Macmillan and Eisenhower met for an hour with de Gaulle Wednesday night for an assessment with their foreign ministers of the international situation resulting from Khrushchev’s abrupt renewal of the cold war. The Western Big Three had expected in advance of this week that the conference would produce little in the way of concrete measures to bring East and West closer together. At the most they had hoped for an improvement of the international atmosphere, with the possibility that there would be future summit conferences Khrushchev Rants, Raves But they were not prepared for the ranting, raving show that Khrushchev put on almost from the moment he stepped on French soil, capped by his nearly incredible performance at a news conference packed with 1,500 to 2,000 people Wednesday. Instead of an improved international atmosephere, things were drastically worse and Western officials sajd this would force the West io make a thorough study of the Allied future course. The reappraisal started in earnest this morning at a meeting or the NATO permanent council here and British sources agreed that Khrushchev’s attacks on the United States and Eisenhower over the U-2 spy Plane downed on Russian soil actually had strengthened the NATO alliance. L -

THURSDAY MAY W IMB

Russia Plans To Order Space Ship To Earth r t *t*nflrff Proea laterwatow** Th. ftovtot Unton report* It wIU bring It* Mtoibiv -• AjirtFr** and cWW <W Anwck*®** 2 C Wednriay MgM everything aboard Ito orbit May 18. *•* • workin* tot; m.Uy” .nd “tto wIU to si ven from earth *hartly to •tart the * • • dr•rent Maj Gen Job" B Mrdari*. tormrr commanding general at US Arm. Ordnance Musik- Command. raid in Chicago Tm one least bit aure that the. .Rusi nan* have a dummy in it. I It would not make sense. MrHaris said for Russia to put up a Stellite of 'sufficient weight and Lnacc tn carry • man. without trying to have a mar.ln W * without trying to bring the vrolclc back to earth intact. , Melvin V Landon. ■ physic* Inrofettor at Na»son College I toriwgvale Maine, even reported Ihe had heard the I vote*** ® man sboord tnr humtian spacednp He said the voic« (sounded "like Donald Duck with I a tore throat ’ • Landon said he ha* faith in hl* radio tape recording* He believe* tto government made similar recording* but i» keeping them *e- | I J The theory ha* been advanced | that Russia would not announce I its satellite was manned unless t was able to recover the spaceman i: alive. Supporters of this thesis point to the adverse propaganda that resulted when the dog 1-aika died aboard Sputnik II in 1958. 11 Some Tourists Call Off Russian Visits NEW YORK < UP!»-Soviet PreI mier Nikita Khrushchevs summit ' i blow-up has caused “some, but not many” American tourists to canI I cel summer trips to Eastern Europe and Russia, a quick survey iof travel agencies showed today. Marvin Deutsch, managing editor of the trade publication Travel Weekly, said his quick check showed agencies were receiving numerous inquirfds but that most travelers were apparently taking ■ a "wait and see attitude.” ‘ Some agents are advising clients ■ to cancel their trips, either be- ' cause they believe Americans may ‘ be subjected to uncomfortable hos--1 tility or because they feel that “if • Ike’s not good enough for them, no one should go ... , Jack Wiersma, president of • American Tourist Buroau. a . “wholesale” agency which han- . dies arrangements with Russia s > Intourist and others for other • agencies, said he felt that if r they don’t want President Eisenhower. why should we give them ,■lO million dollars in tourist mon- ’ ey." t FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT Use T-4-L for 3 to 5 days. Watch fresh-as-a-daisy. healthy skin rei place the infection. If not delight- ■ ed with instant-drying T-4-L, your ■ 48c back from any druggist. Note: • T-4-L is especially for severe f cases. NOW at Kohne Drug Store.

Special Sunday Excursion Rates TO CHICAGO *°™s’A 35 PAU PLUS TAX If AVI SUNDAY MORNINO RETURN SUNDAY EVENIND : A> ERIE RAILROAD Yew Erie ARMRwM«h*«nMD»Iw * DmNmR HckeN Telepteeee 3-4311 if WEEKEND SPECIALS! Ground Beef— Ib. 29c Wienerslb. 39c Head Meat & Souse 1b 39c I Pork Liver - 1b- 21c l Beef Liver Ib. 29c Pork Steak — Ib. 39c 1 Smoked Sausage Ib. lE(} Chuck Roast Ib. 39c 1 Beef Chops Ib. 59c Minute Steak Round Steak T-Bone and Ib. Sirloin OPEN FBI. A SAT. tfflt P. M. SUDDUTH’S Meat Market 512 8. 13th St. Pheße 3-27 M