Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 205, Decatur, Adams County, 30 August 1960 — Page 7
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1960
17-Year-old Plans To Become Linguist By HORTENSE MYERS United Pres* International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—Blonde 17-year-old Jane Allen, daughter of an American clergyman living in Iran, has picked her future career and is well on the way to achieving it. Jane intends to be a linguist and
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already has some knowledge ot four languages. In addition to her native American tongue, she speaks and understands French and Farsi, the language of Iran, and has studied Russian. Miss Allen currently is visiting her Indiana relatives before entering Western College, Oxford, Ohio. Her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Herman Allen, lived in Indiana and California before going to Tehran, where Dr. Allen is pastor of the principal Protestant church of the international community.
“I don’t want to ever .stay in one place,” is the .reason' the attractive teen-ager gives for her choice of future careers. “Besides, I don’t know how to cook or drive a car.” Servants Do Cooking In Tehran, where Miss Allen has lived since she was 13 in a three - story community center operated by the Presbyterian Church, Iranian servants do the cooking. And no one may be licensed to drive a car until the age of 18.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
“Young people never drive about as you do here,” she explained. "We take a taxi. Driving is hazardous, anyway. At stop lights, the cars stop, but the people don’t. The Iranians are fatalists. Two of the most frequently used words are Tarda’— tomorrow — and ‘enshallah’—if Allah wills it.” Nor do teen-agers go out on dates pairing a single boy and a girl. “There usually will be at least eight in a group,” Miss Allen said.
“A girl never goes out at night alone. And if yoijt must go onto the streets in thei daytime alone, then you must hcrry.” “You probably will be pinched by a man. But don’t stop walking. Don’t speak or turh your head. If you do, the Iranian will think you wish his company. And it will do no good to <oall for a policeman. He probaljJy will side with the Iranian. ,f
Civil Defense Plan Proposed For Assembly INDIANAPOLIS (UPD The 1961 Indiana Legislature will be sked to approve a comprehensive plan creating emergency governmental units at all state levels “in the event of an'attack of unprecedented size and destruction upon the United States." The program will be submitted to the Indiana Legislative Advisory Commission next month by Roland Knox, executive administrator of the State Department of Civil Defense, The “CRASH 11 program is incorported in four separate bills. The first sets up a line succession for governor and other high state offices and for judges and prosecuting attorneys. The second designates steps to be taken by county, township, city or town governmental units. The third creates a Vital Records Commission. The fourth would put Civil Defense employes under the merit system. Under provisions of the “Emergency Interim Executive and Judicial Succession Act,” top state elected officials would be in line for the governor’s job if he were killed or injured seriously in an atomic attack. Line of Succession First choice would be the lie tenant governor, the present successor under Indiana law. Then in order would come secretary of state, state auditor, state treasurer, and state attorney general. The bill provides that each state official, other than the governor, shall name no less than three and no more than seven persons who could take over the office in case of emergency and shall specify the order of succession. Emergency successors to state offices would be ineligible to hold the office of governor. Interim successors* would serve only until the governor appointed a successor or until one was elected under statutory procedures. In Addition, the General Assembly would be authorized to terminate an emergency by concurrent resolution. State officials would be required to file their list of successors with the secretary of state within 30 days after the act became law. The governor also would compile a list of three to seven successors and the order of succession for each circuit court clerk, prosecuting attorney. supreme court judge and appellate court judge. Governor Names Jdges The governor would be empowered to appoint a successor “in the event any judge of a court of record or any judge of a county municipal court, a magistrate court, or a city court, is unavail-
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PICTURED ABOVE is Lt. Barbara J. Burke (nurse corps), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Haley of 244 N. Seventh street, Decatur, preparing medicines for administration to Air Force patients. Miss Burke is a staff nurse at Andrews hospital. She was transferred there from Lackland Air Force Base, Tex.
able to exercise the powers and | discharge the duties of his office.” j The same bill would authorize : the legislative bodies of cities, | towns, townships and counties toI enact resolutions or ordinances providing emergency successors. The same provisions would apply to school, fire, power and drainage district*. All interim successors would take the oath of office but would not be compelled to comply with other provisions relative to qualifications for the office. Another’proposed bill would authorize governmental units on the county or local level to establish emergency seats of government anywhere in Indiana. The governing unit could meet “anyplace” on call of the presiding officer or any two members. Shortcuts to Laws Emergency measures passed by such governmental units “may be exercised in the light of the exigencies of the emergency situation without regard to or compliance with time-consuming procedures and formalities prescribed by law .” The Vital Records Commission proposed by Knox would consist of the governor, secretary of state, director of public works and supply, ©state auditor, chief examiner of the State Board of Accounts, director of the state library and director of the historical bureau. 1116 governor would
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appoint a county assessor, a county recorder, a county auditor, a county surveyor and a clerk of a circuit court to four-year terms on the commission. The secretary of state wold preside over the commission and would order hearings at least four times each year to determine what records are vital and should be microfilmed.
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