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ARGENTINA
Tonight'•
dlapatch
from Buenos
states
the following:
•Anew,
modified goV,ernment for
Argentina will be announced in the near
future.•
This
is
attributed
to an official source. The new
modified regime - to guarantee the freedom of the
press.
President Peron, we are told,
ha ■
rece1T-e4
the resignatlona of all sixteen
min1atere
tn
h11
Cabinet.
In
prepaatlon for
--1.R
the government
shake-up.
u.s.
A mba11ador
Albert
Bufer reveal• -
that be was
with Peron
a
few
mtnutee before the
A
revolt broke
out
on Thured&y
·
1a1t.
The Ambassador
- discussing
problem■
of r7Aer1oan firms in A'¼gentina.
The conference broke up at ten fifty-five
am. Peron
- then leaving the Government House, and going acroea
to
the
War Ministry..
A
few seconds
later, rebel planes
dropped
the
first bombs.
One -
exploding under the windows of the
Presidential offices, where Peron had been talking
PIHAT
rrench roreign Minister Pinay gave a
reply , today, to Molotov's arguments yesterday.
The gist of the Pt.nay
addre11 11 found
in the following
statement : • I state
it
frankly
and
bluntly' said
the rrenoh rorelgn Minister•
my
country
11
not
)
prepared to abandon the security insured it
by
the
Borth Atlantic Treaty Organ!zatlon. •
this
referred. back to Molotov•a charge th&t
the military &lllancee of the Western Power•
tncrea1e
world teneion.
Pt.nay
addtng: •••long
a1
t•neral and
controlled
disarmament ha•
n~t
become
&
realit~,
genutne~seourity can
be tnaured.
only in the
framework
of regional agreement• lllke Kato~.•
---o--
APP to GUARDS
H
ere'
s
late news
f
ro
m
San
1anc1sco --
t
h
e p lice in
s
t
a
lling sp
e
cial
s
our1ty guards
t
t
h
e
San
F
ranci
s
co opera
h
ou
e,
that
u
N
meeting.
Following - an
anonymo
I
tl
p
of an
a••~
assassination
atte,pt
against
o
lotov.
A sniper -- planning to
shoot
the
Soviet Min
i
ster.
Probably a crack
pot
-- but the San
Franoi co police
s•
have taken
precautions, lust tn case.
SBCRIT
SERVICE
In w""\.eh1ngttn,
some
shop talk-among
Secret Service
men ~ho guarded
President Eisenhower
1n
s
.
an
Franc
1100,
at the U
I
.
Btrthday
party.
Moloto~ ,
t
oourae
was attended
by
agents
of
the
soviets
efret poltoe.
Ordinarily, when oopa meet, ttiey exchange
cigarettes, and
goaaip.But
not
the
Ru1sian poltoe
agents.
President Biaenhower gave a reception in
the
Veterans• Memorial Butldlng-
wh1ob Molotov
attended.
/ \ ,
The set-up such-
that
both
A
mer1can and Russian
operatives
were
out
tn
a sort of plaza. The t'merioans
- willing to be
o
.
hummy.
But the
Ru111ana
kept
away from
them -
with
wary
glances.
The
Secret
Service
men
are
saying - the
s""'oviet agents are not hard to spot, even in a crowd.
Their
clothes look
clusy.
Their
fa.cea -
aolem~ and
stony • .f'nd they
carry
their guns - too obviously.
IICBKT SERVICE- page
a-
/"\
w
1th a - visible bulge.
-
The Prea14ent1al
guard■
could tell- they,
oarr1e4 forty-t1Te autoaatloa. While our aecret
■ ervlce
men prefer revolTere. They
1a7 a
reTolTer 11 taeter
and more accurate - on the flret ehot. Whlch
■aJ
be,
the oruc1al 1hot. The revolTer - better tor qulck
eharp-ehoot1na, than the automatic.
Shop talk - uong the secret eervlce men
at the White Bouse.
-o--
The t'lov1et-8ponaored • Wor
l
d Peace A~1,emb17•
11
meeting in Heleinti, the capital of r1nland. lo what
did the delegates behold, th1a morning! the town -
pl&1tered with anti-CoDllluniat
placard■•
Ridto"'1ng -
thll ~o-uniat
peaoe
offena1ve. Poeter• - ehowing the
ooamuniat 'dove of peace• dropping bomb• on
o1t1•••
IAST GIRMAIY
The commun1,{ 1n laat Germany announce -
\he arrest of four newspaper men. Three editors and
a proof reader - of the oftlolal
new ■ paper
of the
l&1t
German
oo-un1■ t
party. the charge
agaln1t \hem
- 1abotage.
a('o
what,
ezac,17., dt4 they. do I
~
Well, their
newepaper
publlabed a chart
■ bowing
- that, 1n Soviet
au111a, twent7-1even
■ llllon
people
elgned a
petition \o ban the atomic bomb. l"'o
what wa• wrong with that!
Well, the ottlolal
figure ■
relea1ed
by
Ko1cow
■ aid
- that one hundred and twent1 allllon
people had signed the petition. The three editor•
and the proofreader, acou1ed ot outtlng the figure
dcwn to twenty-seven alllton.
Behind the Iron curtain, you've got to get
y
our communist million• right.
--o---
KOBOCCO
Att
ecaeablanoa, Korooco the French pollce
have made ten arrest,.
B«t -
not of Moroccan terrorli1 •
..
rrenoh
terror~ate - aocuee4 of par,to1patlng in a
campaign
of oounter-v;tolenoe
again1t
tbe
Ko ■ lem
.
(A_
population. !he7re
eaid
to
bave
committed
a
numb•~
of
a■ ea111nat1on1
1n the Ca•ablanoa
Basaar.
A
8 tx of lbe len pr.1eoaer• are policemen -
and an
ar ■ enal
.
of weapon• •••
captured.
----o--
SUDA~
From the
8
udan - reports
nf
a di~aPter of sand
sand
storms.
The worst in three hundred yearR.
The••••
stor ■ s
- blowin~ and howling for tbirty-eix hours.
Eleven
liVies -
known
to
bave
been
loRt.
I
The worst - weR at the town of Tokar.
miles -
from the
Red.
ea harbour of Port Sudan,
Forty
Tokar
- in the
irrt,ated
valley, on
the edRe of
the
deeert.
People - buried tn their
ho■es.
when the
te■ peet fro ■
tbe
desert
poured
mountains of sand over the
twwn.
Travel1e~s.
who
beve been tn tho~e parts know
the
terror of the
sand
Rtorm.
experience
once in the Sudan.
could
see
it
co■ inJ ■ ilea
away,
I myself
went
throu~h the
The dread Huboob.
We
Lite a churning
■ountain
wall
1veep1n,
relentlessly down
upon
UR.
And when
it
bit!
Well,
it's tndi~cribable.
So I can at least
imagine what the worst sand
stor ■ t■
the Sudan bas
bad in three hundred years, was like.
QUIii
Tonight, Queen Elizabeth can eee - the
flicker of diatant f1ree.Aboard the Royal Yacht
glimmering
light ■
-
along a rocky ehore.
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh are
paying
a visit of eta,e- to •orwa7. The e1r11 It••
the Queen ha1 made an off1c~al trip outside the
Brltlah
COllllODWe&llh.
the
•orweglan■
-
gfYlng her a •elcome of
bon
tire ■•
one
the 1U1111lt1 of coa1tal
■ountatn■
-
,.._,
f.laae ■
leaping high.~
n
old
cu1to■
ot
the
•or ■ e■en
- who , back in the
dt■ day; ■
of the paet, sent
■easa1••
by
11gnal fire - from
■ountaln
to mountain.
--o--
Tonight, once again, we have the •Abominable
Snowman'B1gger - and more formidable
than
ever.
The Brit11h Alr Mlnlatry,
tn
London,
tell ■
of a recent expe41t1on byi aountaln cllmber1 of tbe
Royal Alr roroe. Who explored tbe Kultl Glacier
Snowman•.
lative
Sherpa Gulde• believe
it's a halry
creature, halt
man,
half beaat. Preve1ou1 We1tern
climber• have reported -
findln1
strange
track ■•
/\
One opinion belng - that
the•
Abominable
8 nowman•
11
really a
big
Blmala7an bear.
But
here••
what the A1r Mlnl1tar7 in London
say ■:
•
!here were man, print••
lach
mea1ure4 about
twelve by alx
feet - and indicated that the creature
was two -
legged
wlth flY.e toe• on each toot. The
prints,
•4eclarea the Air Mlnletry, • were sunk eleven
inches
into the
■ now
- compared wtth the one-inch
Impression made
by
the
R,
A.
r.
mountaineers • •
HIMALAYAS- page 2--
Which cerlalnly
would 1eem to
1nd1oa,e -
a ponderoue monster.
s
qua4ron
Leader
L.V. Davl1, a Vieteran of
the H
'1a7a1,
aaJ•
1 •
·
the
tootprtnt1 were far larger
than those of any bear.•
--o--
PASSPORTS
In Washington,
th
.
e
U
.s.
Court of
A ppeal1,
today,
issued
a
ruling of major
Importance -
oonneole4
with paasporta. !he
Court dented
the olalm the State
Department hae
alwaya made -
that 1, ha• the
eole
a •
power to 1eeue, or deny,
paa ■ porte
for travel abroad.
With •o appeal.
The
oaee
tn
queatton wae brough' by Kax
Slhaohtman, of••• York,
chairman of the Independent
a
ooiallet ■._League.
ror three 7ear1, the State
Department ha1
been
refusing him a pa1sport-
beaau■ e
the League
11
on tbe eub~er11ve 11st of the D apartment
of Juattce.
S
_p
now the ICourt of Appeal• declare•
-that the dec1a1on
by
the State Department ehall be
aublect
to reTiiew
by
the
court ■•
A
pa11por~-may
be
part of the conet1tutional rights of a citizen.
--o--
s:r11L
The U
Steel
Corporation
made
an
■I
ofter
propoaing
to the steel workers again today
~ • • t q --
a wage inores.se of more
than ten cents
an hour.
But
this
1s immedi
a
tely
rej
e
cted
by
the
unio
n
--
with
expressions of••••• scorn.
GI.IRAL
'
NOTOBI
General Kotore• new half-bl111oft•4ollar
expanaion program -
will
inclu~e
an
enlargement
of the
, rtaher
Body
Dlv111on. A ~41n
.
g - four
and a
balt
mllllon 1quare feet of plant apace. !wo new
■ tamping
plants will be
■ et
up - tn
a441tlon
lo a
program
ot
mo4ernlz1ng ext1tlng tac1itl1ee.
rt ■her
Bocl7 -
par\S.c1patlng
tn the
m.x.
expan1t!on progra., a.uouacect b7, company
Pre114ent
Barlow
Curtlo•a •• 1
C P
----o---
VACCIII* SOIINTISTS
... ~·-=--·-·..,.-""""'"'.;,-
_
A
A panel of top - ranking polio
■ oient.i1t ■
has
voted, eight to hree - to
endor ■ e
the
•atetJ
of
,.
---
..
the
Salk
vaccine. And - continue the nattonw14e
tnocoula
1:on program.
The v.ote
wa■
:taken dur1
·
ng the
1econd day of
&
polio
•round
table•
oonducte6
by
a Congre111onal
eub-oommlttee. In4toat1ona are that the Government w111
heed
the
advice, faTor1ng the Salk Tiaoclne.
--oo---
BELL TOWER
A bell tower, as a memorial to the late
Senator Taft of Ohio - will be built on the grounds
f""'\.
of the Capitol 1n w
,
aahington ••
1i
remains for Congress to glve
recommendations are
10
powerful
be any doubt.
late
,a ,.,.
allll@
~
ite appro•a
~
,
fbe
- there will hardly
Today Prelsdent
li1enhower, 301ned by
former President Herbert Hoover,
■ ent
a communication
to
Congrea1 -
urging this oommemorat1on of the
late
aepublioan leader in the
Senate.
The bell
tower
would be presented by the
Robert A . Taft Memorial Foundation. A marble
tower -
one hundred feet high. Vlth - a twenty-five-bell
carillon.
----o---
RIPTILI
On the
Nebza■ ka
fa~m of
eaarl
Wagenkec~,,
a bulldozer uncovered - the toa111 1ke1e,on ot
&
ples1osaur.
A
- whloh flour1ehe4
on
th1e ear,h more
than
&
hundred million years
ago.
Sc1ent11ts of the Un1Tier•lty of
Bebraeka
,
say the remain• are thoae of a aonater lhtr,y-f1Y.e
were four
paddle ■,
uaed for
1wl1111tng.
- that
ple1101aur.
---o-----
JYLOB
Here's
alar ■ tn,.
vord from Nev iork.
Catastrophe
threaten
in~.
A
valiant
lady -
undertaktn~
&
crusade
to
avert the peril.
Mre.
Laura Cauble -
maktn~ an appeal
to the Department of Air Pollution.
Mrs. Cauble
warns -
that
there's
sulphuric
acid
in the air.
to health?
Fumes -
of
that powerful
cbemical,
a
danger
It's
worse
than
that.
A danger
to -
well,
let's
see vbat
the
lady
crusader
bas
to
■ ay.
In
her
appeal
to
the city
fathers, sbe points
out that fumes of sulphuric
acid will
diRrolve
nrlon.
The
chemical
in
the
aif. -
known
to disolv.e nylon
stockings right
off a
~irl'a
te,a.
But that's
not
all.
·
Mrs Cauble tells the rest
in the following ominous words: "the fact is" she says,
"women,
today
are
al ■ Jst co■pletely
clothed
tn
nylon".
threatens
so
you can
see what
z ■■at■ •
A
lady,
out
for
a walk, might find her dress
diAolvin~,
her gloves, her
scarf, all her film¥ ,arments - whatever they may
be,
All disolvin~.
"Can you
imapine·
'
says Mrs
lauble"
a fate
worse then that?"
·
I
ISEHHQWER
No end of d1acuas1on is
a
rou
e
d
by
a
statement President Eisenho
e
r made at Oonoord,
New Hampe ire today.
It 1s
eing taken as a hint of
a second term for the President. He wa
talking
about Sherman Adams
W&J
of telling Hew England•*••*•¥
stories, and said the Presidential
A1s11tan, waa
only about a third t~rough a budget of yarns.
The
President indicating th
a
t he hoped to hear all of
wouldn't be
them.
The
arithmetic 11 1uch that he
asa■tsx•■tS■••
able to
bea.r
all of th
1
el_
ex7pt by being
1n
the White
House for a second t e ~
this hint all kinda
/
·
of speculations are being reared.
Tonight'•
dlapatch
from Buenos
states
the following:
•Anew,
modified goV,ernment for
Argentina will be announced in the near
future.•
This
is
attributed
to an official source. The new
modified regime - to guarantee the freedom of the
press.
President Peron, we are told,
ha ■
rece1T-e4
the resignatlona of all sixteen
min1atere
tn
h11
Cabinet.
In
prepaatlon for
--1.R
the government
shake-up.
u.s.
A mba11ador
Albert
Bufer reveal• -
that be was
with Peron
a
few
mtnutee before the
A
revolt broke
out
on Thured&y
·
1a1t.
The Ambassador
- discussing
problem■
of r7Aer1oan firms in A'¼gentina.
The conference broke up at ten fifty-five
am. Peron
- then leaving the Government House, and going acroea
to
the
War Ministry..
A
few seconds
later, rebel planes
dropped
the
first bombs.
One -
exploding under the windows of the
Presidential offices, where Peron had been talking
PIHAT
rrench roreign Minister Pinay gave a
reply , today, to Molotov's arguments yesterday.
The gist of the Pt.nay
addre11 11 found
in the following
statement : • I state
it
frankly
and
bluntly' said
the rrenoh rorelgn Minister•
my
country
11
not
)
prepared to abandon the security insured it
by
the
Borth Atlantic Treaty Organ!zatlon. •
this
referred. back to Molotov•a charge th&t
the military &lllancee of the Western Power•
tncrea1e
world teneion.
Pt.nay
addtng: •••long
a1
t•neral and
controlled
disarmament ha•
n~t
become
&
realit~,
genutne~seourity can
be tnaured.
only in the
framework
of regional agreement• lllke Kato~.•
---o--
APP to GUARDS
H
ere'
s
late news
f
ro
m
San
1anc1sco --
t
h
e p lice in
s
t
a
lling sp
e
cial
s
our1ty guards
t
t
h
e
San
F
ranci
s
co opera
h
ou
e,
that
u
N
meeting.
Following - an
anonymo
I
tl
p
of an
a••~
assassination
atte,pt
against
o
lotov.
A sniper -- planning to
shoot
the
Soviet Min
i
ster.
Probably a crack
pot
-- but the San
Franoi co police
s•
have taken
precautions, lust tn case.
SBCRIT
SERVICE
In w""\.eh1ngttn,
some
shop talk-among
Secret Service
men ~ho guarded
President Eisenhower
1n
s
.
an
Franc
1100,
at the U
I
.
Btrthday
party.
Moloto~ ,
t
oourae
was attended
by
agents
of
the
soviets
efret poltoe.
Ordinarily, when oopa meet, ttiey exchange
cigarettes, and
goaaip.But
not
the
Ru1sian poltoe
agents.
President Biaenhower gave a reception in
the
Veterans• Memorial Butldlng-
wh1ob Molotov
attended.
/ \ ,
The set-up such-
that
both
A
mer1can and Russian
operatives
were
out
tn
a sort of plaza. The t'merioans
- willing to be
o
.
hummy.
But the
Ru111ana
kept
away from
them -
with
wary
glances.
The
Secret
Service
men
are
saying - the
s""'oviet agents are not hard to spot, even in a crowd.
Their
clothes look
clusy.
Their
fa.cea -
aolem~ and
stony • .f'nd they
carry
their guns - too obviously.
IICBKT SERVICE- page
a-
/"\
w
1th a - visible bulge.
-
The Prea14ent1al
guard■
could tell- they,
oarr1e4 forty-t1Te autoaatloa. While our aecret
■ ervlce
men prefer revolTere. They
1a7 a
reTolTer 11 taeter
and more accurate - on the flret ehot. Whlch
■aJ
be,
the oruc1al 1hot. The revolTer - better tor qulck
eharp-ehoot1na, than the automatic.
Shop talk - uong the secret eervlce men
at the White Bouse.
-o--
The t'lov1et-8ponaored • Wor
l
d Peace A~1,emb17•
11
meeting in Heleinti, the capital of r1nland. lo what
did the delegates behold, th1a morning! the town -
pl&1tered with anti-CoDllluniat
placard■•
Ridto"'1ng -
thll ~o-uniat
peaoe
offena1ve. Poeter• - ehowing the
ooamuniat 'dove of peace• dropping bomb• on
o1t1•••
IAST GIRMAIY
The commun1,{ 1n laat Germany announce -
\he arrest of four newspaper men. Three editors and
a proof reader - of the oftlolal
new ■ paper
of the
l&1t
German
oo-un1■ t
party. the charge
agaln1t \hem
- 1abotage.
a('o
what,
ezac,17., dt4 they. do I
~
Well, their
newepaper
publlabed a chart
■ bowing
- that, 1n Soviet
au111a, twent7-1even
■ llllon
people
elgned a
petition \o ban the atomic bomb. l"'o
what wa• wrong with that!
Well, the ottlolal
figure ■
relea1ed
by
Ko1cow
■ aid
- that one hundred and twent1 allllon
people had signed the petition. The three editor•
and the proofreader, acou1ed ot outtlng the figure
dcwn to twenty-seven alllton.
Behind the Iron curtain, you've got to get
y
our communist million• right.
--o---
KOBOCCO
Att
ecaeablanoa, Korooco the French pollce
have made ten arrest,.
B«t -
not of Moroccan terrorli1 •
..
rrenoh
terror~ate - aocuee4 of par,to1patlng in a
campaign
of oounter-v;tolenoe
again1t
tbe
Ko ■ lem
.
(A_
population. !he7re
eaid
to
bave
committed
a
numb•~
of
a■ ea111nat1on1
1n the Ca•ablanoa
Basaar.
A
8 tx of lbe len pr.1eoaer• are policemen -
and an
ar ■ enal
.
of weapon• •••
captured.
----o--
SUDA~
From the
8
udan - reports
nf
a di~aPter of sand
sand
storms.
The worst in three hundred yearR.
The••••
stor ■ s
- blowin~ and howling for tbirty-eix hours.
Eleven
liVies -
known
to
bave
been
loRt.
I
The worst - weR at the town of Tokar.
miles -
from the
Red.
ea harbour of Port Sudan,
Forty
Tokar
- in the
irrt,ated
valley, on
the edRe of
the
deeert.
People - buried tn their
ho■es.
when the
te■ peet fro ■
tbe
desert
poured
mountains of sand over the
twwn.
Travel1e~s.
who
beve been tn tho~e parts know
the
terror of the
sand
Rtorm.
experience
once in the Sudan.
could
see
it
co■ inJ ■ ilea
away,
I myself
went
throu~h the
The dread Huboob.
We
Lite a churning
■ountain
wall
1veep1n,
relentlessly down
upon
UR.
And when
it
bit!
Well,
it's tndi~cribable.
So I can at least
imagine what the worst sand
stor ■ t■
the Sudan bas
bad in three hundred years, was like.
QUIii
Tonight, Queen Elizabeth can eee - the
flicker of diatant f1ree.Aboard the Royal Yacht
glimmering
light ■
-
along a rocky ehore.
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh are
paying
a visit of eta,e- to •orwa7. The e1r11 It••
the Queen ha1 made an off1c~al trip outside the
Brltlah
COllllODWe&llh.
the
•orweglan■
-
gfYlng her a •elcome of
bon
tire ■•
one
the 1U1111lt1 of coa1tal
■ountatn■
-
,.._,
f.laae ■
leaping high.~
n
old
cu1to■
ot
the
•or ■ e■en
- who , back in the
dt■ day; ■
of the paet, sent
■easa1••
by
11gnal fire - from
■ountaln
to mountain.
--o--
Tonight, once again, we have the •Abominable
Snowman'B1gger - and more formidable
than
ever.
The Brit11h Alr Mlnlatry,
tn
London,
tell ■
of a recent expe41t1on byi aountaln cllmber1 of tbe
Royal Alr roroe. Who explored tbe Kultl Glacier
Snowman•.
lative
Sherpa Gulde• believe
it's a halry
creature, halt
man,
half beaat. Preve1ou1 We1tern
climber• have reported -
findln1
strange
track ■•
/\
One opinion belng - that
the•
Abominable
8 nowman•
11
really a
big
Blmala7an bear.
But
here••
what the A1r Mlnl1tar7 in London
say ■:
•
!here were man, print••
lach
mea1ure4 about
twelve by alx
feet - and indicated that the creature
was two -
legged
wlth flY.e toe• on each toot. The
prints,
•4eclarea the Air Mlnletry, • were sunk eleven
inches
into the
■ now
- compared wtth the one-inch
Impression made
by
the
R,
A.
r.
mountaineers • •
HIMALAYAS- page 2--
Which cerlalnly
would 1eem to
1nd1oa,e -
a ponderoue monster.
s
qua4ron
Leader
L.V. Davl1, a Vieteran of
the H
'1a7a1,
aaJ•
1 •
·
the
tootprtnt1 were far larger
than those of any bear.•
--o--
PASSPORTS
In Washington,
th
.
e
U
.s.
Court of
A ppeal1,
today,
issued
a
ruling of major
Importance -
oonneole4
with paasporta. !he
Court dented
the olalm the State
Department hae
alwaya made -
that 1, ha• the
eole
a •
power to 1eeue, or deny,
paa ■ porte
for travel abroad.
With •o appeal.
The
oaee
tn
queatton wae brough' by Kax
Slhaohtman, of••• York,
chairman of the Independent
a
ooiallet ■._League.
ror three 7ear1, the State
Department ha1
been
refusing him a pa1sport-
beaau■ e
the League
11
on tbe eub~er11ve 11st of the D apartment
of Juattce.
S
_p
now the ICourt of Appeal• declare•
-that the dec1a1on
by
the State Department ehall be
aublect
to reTiiew
by
the
court ■•
A
pa11por~-may
be
part of the conet1tutional rights of a citizen.
--o--
s:r11L
The U
Steel
Corporation
made
an
■I
ofter
propoaing
to the steel workers again today
~ • • t q --
a wage inores.se of more
than ten cents
an hour.
But
this
1s immedi
a
tely
rej
e
cted
by
the
unio
n
--
with
expressions of••••• scorn.
GI.IRAL
'
NOTOBI
General Kotore• new half-bl111oft•4ollar
expanaion program -
will
inclu~e
an
enlargement
of the
, rtaher
Body
Dlv111on. A ~41n
.
g - four
and a
balt
mllllon 1quare feet of plant apace. !wo new
■ tamping
plants will be
■ et
up - tn
a441tlon
lo a
program
ot
mo4ernlz1ng ext1tlng tac1itl1ee.
rt ■her
Bocl7 -
par\S.c1patlng
tn the
m.x.
expan1t!on progra., a.uouacect b7, company
Pre114ent
Barlow
Curtlo•a •• 1
C P
----o---
VACCIII* SOIINTISTS
... ~·-=--·-·..,.-""""'"'.;,-
_
A
A panel of top - ranking polio
■ oient.i1t ■
has
voted, eight to hree - to
endor ■ e
the
•atetJ
of
,.
---
..
the
Salk
vaccine. And - continue the nattonw14e
tnocoula
1:on program.
The v.ote
wa■
:taken dur1
·
ng the
1econd day of
&
polio
•round
table•
oonducte6
by
a Congre111onal
eub-oommlttee. In4toat1ona are that the Government w111
heed
the
advice, faTor1ng the Salk Tiaoclne.
--oo---
BELL TOWER
A bell tower, as a memorial to the late
Senator Taft of Ohio - will be built on the grounds
f""'\.
of the Capitol 1n w
,
aahington ••
1i
remains for Congress to glve
recommendations are
10
powerful
be any doubt.
late
,a ,.,.
allll@
~
ite appro•a
~
,
fbe
- there will hardly
Today Prelsdent
li1enhower, 301ned by
former President Herbert Hoover,
■ ent
a communication
to
Congrea1 -
urging this oommemorat1on of the
late
aepublioan leader in the
Senate.
The bell
tower
would be presented by the
Robert A . Taft Memorial Foundation. A marble
tower -
one hundred feet high. Vlth - a twenty-five-bell
carillon.
----o---
RIPTILI
On the
Nebza■ ka
fa~m of
eaarl
Wagenkec~,,
a bulldozer uncovered - the toa111 1ke1e,on ot
&
ples1osaur.
A
- whloh flour1ehe4
on
th1e ear,h more
than
&
hundred million years
ago.
Sc1ent11ts of the Un1Tier•lty of
Bebraeka
,
say the remain• are thoae of a aonater lhtr,y-f1Y.e
were four
paddle ■,
uaed for
1wl1111tng.
- that
ple1101aur.
---o-----
JYLOB
Here's
alar ■ tn,.
vord from Nev iork.
Catastrophe
threaten
in~.
A
valiant
lady -
undertaktn~
&
crusade
to
avert the peril.
Mre.
Laura Cauble -
maktn~ an appeal
to the Department of Air Pollution.
Mrs. Cauble
warns -
that
there's
sulphuric
acid
in the air.
to health?
Fumes -
of
that powerful
cbemical,
a
danger
It's
worse
than
that.
A danger
to -
well,
let's
see vbat
the
lady
crusader
bas
to
■ ay.
In
her
appeal
to
the city
fathers, sbe points
out that fumes of sulphuric
acid will
diRrolve
nrlon.
The
chemical
in
the
aif. -
known
to disolv.e nylon
stockings right
off a
~irl'a
te,a.
But that's
not
all.
·
Mrs Cauble tells the rest
in the following ominous words: "the fact is" she says,
"women,
today
are
al ■ Jst co■pletely
clothed
tn
nylon".
threatens
so
you can
see what
z ■■at■ •
A
lady,
out
for
a walk, might find her dress
diAolvin~,
her gloves, her
scarf, all her film¥ ,arments - whatever they may
be,
All disolvin~.
"Can you
imapine·
'
says Mrs
lauble"
a fate
worse then that?"
·
I
ISEHHQWER
No end of d1acuas1on is
a
rou
e
d
by
a
statement President Eisenho
e
r made at Oonoord,
New Hampe ire today.
It 1s
eing taken as a hint of
a second term for the President. He wa
talking
about Sherman Adams
W&J
of telling Hew England•*••*•¥
stories, and said the Presidential
A1s11tan, waa
only about a third t~rough a budget of yarns.
The
President indicating th
a
t he hoped to hear all of
wouldn't be
them.
The
arithmetic 11 1uch that he
asa■tsx•■tS■••
able to
bea.r
all of th
1
el_
ex7pt by being
1n
the White
House for a second t e ~
this hint all kinda
/
·
of speculations are being reared.