Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1937 — Page 4

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EFFECTS OF '37 TRAINCREW ACT TOBE STUDIED

(Public Service Commission ! To Give Interpretation Of New Law.

i. |Results of the newly enacted In{diana Full Crew Train Act 2 , be determined in a state-wide suriv y of steam lines, it was announced . t day by R. C. Gilbert, Public Service Commission chief railroad in- © L.spector. : it Meanwhile, the Commission has «Interpretation of the new act unit der consideration, Mr. Gilbert said. |. Questions as to the application of its rules have been brought before +! the Commission.

. Fifteen of the state's 19 steam {,roads are affected by the act, which requires additional men on freight j and passenger trains.

. 4 Poa 8 kd ¥ Eo N Ro SE

it The act provides that no carrier! :

«may operate freight trains of 70 «cars or more without a full crew ~ of engineer, fireman, conductor, + flagman and two brakeman. Where ‘the train is less than 70 cars, the train must have the same crew except that only one brakeman is : required. Indiana roads are complying with “the act, Mr. Gilbert said. Labor ‘representatives estimate the cost of «the extra men at approximately :$500,000 annually, while railroad of.ficials contended during the Legis- . lature’s session that the cost would exceed $1,500,000.

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~ ‘House Approves Liberalized | Bill for Alien Deportation

"Times Special 2 WwW.

HINGTON, June 11. —The House was pverwheimingly on record

today for shipping, criminal aliens out of the country and retaining the small number of good-character aliens who are in difficulties over pass- : [1] -

ports. | ~ It had its first [chance in three wyears to express itself on one of the ‘many deportation bills that have been pending. In something over «four hours it voted down all amend‘ments except a liberalizing one and {sent the measure to the Senate. ~ There a filibuster is threatened by =Senator- Reynolds (D. N. C., who .prevented a vote on a similiar (measure last year. But if it comes “to the floor before adjournment is “within sight, friends of the bill believe the filibuster can be broken. ‘Senator Reynolds has already reinewed his campaign against the ‘bill in a radio address. Eight Thousand Exempted The bill, sponsored by Rep. Mar‘ti Dies (D. Tex.), rewrites deportaption law to - permit expulsion of some 20,000 criminal aliens who are ‘hot now subject to deportation. ‘Reporting it favorably, the House ‘Immigration Committee pointed out that many aliens who have spent years in jail are not deport!able because they did not receive ithe requisite sentence, under existing deportation law. For ex.ample, they cannot be deported for gun-toting.

Provisions of the Dies bill reilating to “hardship cases” em-

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power the Secretary of Labor to legalize their permanent residence in this country under drastic limitations. The Secretary is given this power for four years only, and may exempt a maximum of 8000 aliens. The total number allowed to remain is to be deducted from immigration quotas, so no net increase in alien population will result. Russion Charge Rejected

Only those aliens may remain who are found to be of good character. Those guilty of crimes involving moral turpitude, or of advecating anarcny or similar political offenses, are barred. To stay, an alien, who is otherwise deportable, must have lived in this country 10 years or must have living here a parent, spouse or child who is an American citizen. The one amendment adopted in the House provided that aliens

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guilty of swearing to false information on passports or vises shall not be deemed guilty of moral turpitude. The amendment, sponsored by Rep. Michael J. Bradley (D. Pa.), covers a few cases for which special relief bills have been pending. The House voted down efforts of Reps. Howard W. Smith (D. Va.) and Joe Starnes (D, Ala.) to drop the hardship cases from the bill entirely. It also rejected an amendment by Rep. Hamilton Fish (R. N.

Y.) to deport aliens who visit Russia. The: Dies bill is similar in many respects to the Administration’ bill drafted originally by the late Daniel W. MacCormack, Commissioner of Michigan.

be ae rad WEYGOLD TALKS AT PICNIC Frederick Weygold, Louisville, is to deliver the address at the annual picnic for the Federation of German Societies at Germania Park on S. Meridian St., July 5. Lieut. Gov.

Henry F. Schricker also is to speak.

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VASSAR HEAD GIVES ADDRESS AT TUDOR HALL

‘Know Your Own Mind,’ Is Dr. MacCracken’s Plea To 20 Graduates.

Dr. Henry Noble MacCracken, Vassar College president, told 20 graduating girls of Tudor Hall last night to “know your own mind and try to understand the minds of others.” He spoke at the 35th annual commencement in the First Presbyterian Church,

Drawing an analogy in which he compared the mind to a universe consisting of two hemispheres of feeling and thinking, or in the abstract, of art and science, he said that ‘art cannot advance without science and that science is sterile without art.” “Everyone must choose the government for his mind,” he said. “Education has the power to suggest a system of checks and balances. “Equipment of memory, logic, foresight, insight, health and sympathy is necessary to travel into the minds! of others,” he added. “The high school diploma is a passport to better understanding of others.”

Dance Follows Exercises

Dr. Rees Edgar Tullos, Wittenberg College president, delivered the invocation, and Miss I. Hilda Stewart, principal; presented diplomas. Graduates were: Jane Adams, Rosalind Barskin, Anne Shaw Davis, Helen Wheelock Griffith, Barbara Ann Hadley, Dorothy Jean Hendrickson, Elizabeth Ray Kadel, Harriet Patterson, Jane Rottger and Eleanor Frances Winslow, all of Indianapolis. Barbara Bishop Prentice, Terre Haute; Norma J. Ballard, French Lick; Ann Davis Crume, Peru; Ruth Merriam Fishback, Muncie; Miriam Ann Goldfarb, Louisville; Catherine

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Honor Guest

J. H. Aufderheide is to be guest of houor at the Commonwealth Loan Company's 50th anniversary banquet in the Indianapolis Athletic Club tomorrow night. T. M. Kaufman, executive vice president, is to be toastmaster at the banquet, which is to climax a two-day biennial business session attended by managers and other officers of the 49 branches. lb

Helles Kemp, Frankfort; Laura Jean Long, Columbus; Marjorie McCullough, Anderson; Nancy Martha Tulloss, Springfield, O., and Dorothea Frances Urbahns, Cambridge City.

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TOWNSEND TO SPEAK ‘| Ry United Press : GARRETT, June 11. — Governor T. Farley also is to attend the cere« Townsend is to dedicate Garrett's | monies. -

FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1937 | new $62,000 postoffice on June 286, i it was announced today. Rep. James ’*,

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