Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 59, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1961 — Page 6
Page Six
Plot On Bolivian Government Broken LAPAZ, Bolivia (UPD— Troops and police today broke, up a plot to overthrow the government and captured at least 12 of its leaders, it was officially announced. A' state of siege was proclaimed. The government identified the mdin leaders of the plot as Jose Nunez Rosales and Richard Anaya, members of the illegal revolutionary leftist party, and Gustavo Chacon of the Bolivian socialist falange party. Official sources said Nunez committed suicide after his arrest. President Victor Paz Estensso-
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ro met with his cabinet from midnight until 7 a. m. to deal with the plot. He proclaimed a state of siege. The government said the rebels were headed for Viacha in 12 trucks when police and troops captured their column. It said they apparently had hoped for support from the army's Bolivar regiment, garrisoned in Viacha. Gloomy Weather Is Prevalent In State By United Press International Gloomy weather with rain spread over Indiana today, interrupting a string of fair and warm October days. Light rain fell over most of the state this morning. It was not expected to amount to much, and it was scheduled to be over by this evening. Cooler temperatures lay in the wake of the weather change. But fair skies were due to return Friday and remain Saturday along with a return to warmer temperatures. Highs Wednesday ranged from 74 at Fort Wayne to 82 at Evans ville. Overnight lows ranged from 49 at Indianapolis to 53 at Lafay-| ette.
Forbid Telegrapher Strike On Railroad SAN FRANCISCO (UPD -The 9th U. S. Court of Appeals early today issued a temporary restraining order forbidding a telegraphers strike against the Southern Pacific railroad. The court handed down the order after an unprecedented midnight session. The order ruled out a walkout that could have tied up Southern Pacific operations in California, Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico and Texas. However, George Leighty, president of the Order of Railroad Telegraphers, said picket lines already were forming and predicted some work stoppage because of the difficulty in communicating with union members throughout the area. A spokesman for the railroad said, "We’ll do our best to run normal operations.” Today’s restraining order halts a strike until a hearing Wednesday. Oct. 25, when the threejudge panel will consider an' appeal from a decision Wednesday by U. S District Judge Lloyd H. Burke. Burke dissolved a restraining order obtained by the
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
railroad Tuesday from U. S. District Judge Albert C. Wollenbarg. The strike involves a 3«4iyearold dispute in which the union is seeking protection against firing of its members because of technological changes. ■ ‘• Students Riol In Dominican Republic CIUDAD TRUJILLO. D.R. (UPD Troops and police opposed antigovernment student rioters Wednesday in Trujillo and Santiago. the Dominican Republics two principal cities, it was reported today. Club-swinging police bloodied the heads of a number of rioters in a gloves-off clash here, although no casualties were reported officially. Troops turned out in Santiago to guard likely targets of mob violence. At least 25 teen-agers were arrested in Ciudad Trujillo as a result of two clashes with police. Pro-government reports from Santiago mentioned “some casualties and some arrests' but gave no details.
Probing Cause Os Blast At Chicago Plant CHICAGO (UPD—Which of he lamb-like unguents in miladys shamoo contained a hidden tiger which leveled an “explosion roof building and injured at least 250 persons? That was the question Chicago firemen hoped to answer today through an examination of the rubble which was all that remained of Building J. a long History structure at the 16-building elene Curtis cosmetics plant. Chicago building commissioner George L. Ramsey said, “I’m sure well find the cause of the trouble.” The structure contained such chemicals as vinyl acetate, oxygen, hydrogen, sulhur, fluorine, chlorosulfuric acid and ethyl acetate. It had been built as nearly “explosion proof” and safe as they could make it, company officials said. It contained “spark Proof” floors, an emergency alarm system and special telephone and lighting equipment. Alarm Saves Lives The special gear failed to prevent Wednesday’s explosion, the second in nine years at the plant, but the alarm system was credited with saving lives and preventing more serious injuries. Only one of the injured was critically hurt. The blast shattered the quiet of an unusually warm October moming shortly before 9 a.m. Wednesday. le was heard as far away as Chicago’s Loop, seven miles southeast and Evanston, 11., nine miles northeast. In suburban Skokie, eight miles north, it was so loud one woman thought her neighbors house had exploded. It knocked a coffee pot from a stove -15 blocks east of the lant. Windows were broken 20 blocks away. Many in the area thought it was a bomb. $1 Million Damage Damage estimates ranged above $1 million. There were at least 155 buildings damaged. At the adjoining Zenith Radio Corp, plant, where most of the injuries occurred, 350 windows were blown out. A car was knocked against an embankment while driving by the cosmetics plant. Nails were pulled from walls in a house across the street. In building J, employes of Helene Curtis w'ere mixing a newly develoed detergent formula when they heard a hising noise, It was followed by the buildings siren alarm system. / William Day. 22. one of the few inside who escaped serious injury, said. “We had been drilled to drop everything and run like hell if we
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CROSS ON THE CROSSROADS— SymboI of an unsuccessful plea for peace and brotherhood, a seven-foot wooden cross rests on Communist-erected barbed wire in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin. It was left there in the “no man’s land” of the Cold War by Lebanese student Edmund Khayat after East German police refused to let him enter East Berlin. Khayat had carried the cross through many cities in Western Europe, appealing to the “conscience of mankind.” Sign says, “You are now leaving West Berlin.”
heard a siren. We did.,, Rain of Glass But the siren which saved lives in the Helene Curtis plant caused injuries atthe Zenith plant. Curious electronics workers rushed to windows at the Zenith plant, to be met by a rain of glass shards from the blast. Scores were cut. A nearby tree was stripped of leaves, limbs and bark. Some of the injured had all clothing torn from their bodies. Lenses were blown from one workman’s glasses, but the frames remained intact. A twisted length of pipe was deposited atop a water storage tank 100 feet away. Tops of parked cars were crushed. Thick concrete walls sagged. Seventy persons remained hositalized today. More Employment Gains Predicted CHICAGO (UPD— The nations employment has recovered from’ recession losses, Commerce Secretary Luther H. Hodges said today, and more gains will be made in the next few months. Hodges, in an address reared for delivery at the 43rd annual meeting of the llinois Chamber of Commerce, said there has been a gain of 2.6 million jobs since February. This, he said, is “nearly double the normal increase for this period.’ Non - farm jobs, Hodges said, set a new high in September. “Total unemloyment,” Hodges said, “fell seasonally to 4.1 million in September, but the sea sonally adjusted unemployment rate died only one tenth of 1 per cent to 6.8 per cent of the labor force. “However, there was better-than-seasonal improvement for the second month in long-term unemployment, and the unemployment among adult men declined from 6.1 per cent to 5.7 per cent at the seasonally adjusted rates. “I think we will begin to cut more significantly into joblessness
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961
is a significant and highly useful first step by the federal government in trying to deal with aver v important economic problem in our country,” Hodges said. | He said the redevelopment ad- ■ ministration “is not in business to ; dispense ‘handouts to any com- | minify.’ But, he said, “it wi11... I help those redevelopment areas i which are willing to help them- ' selves.”
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