Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 March 1940 — Page 15

Twit small stokers. Motion ple-|and traveling gréte siakers, iad tires ‘on ‘furnace design require- er stokers ne pulverized Coal. : ments will be shown in the eve-| At the final afternoon meeting, ning. | ” holler feedwater restment o In~ I 14 - The April 3 morhing session will i of boiler and other heat i : consider underfeed stokers, chain fer surfaces will be outlined. [a

Featherweight’ PURINE SETS COAL [macs Se vn ~ Engine Planned, ‘SESSION FOR APRIL! Hon and the. Goal Trade Associ-

tion of Indiana ‘co-operating. By Sciénee Service The April 2 ‘morning session will WASHINGTON, March 31—A new| LAFAYETTE, Ind, March 21.—|discuss fundamentals of combustype of experimental airplane engine | Purdue University’s annual Indianajtion and the selection, installation]: that weighs only 0.6 pound for every | C081 Conference, intended for users,land use of combustion control inhorsepower it develops was described distributors and producers of In- struments. At. the afternoon sesat the National Aeronautic meeting|diana coal, will be held here April sion, there will be a discussion bi : here sponsored by the Society of(2°3 = the stoker’s place in the retail e Automotive Engineers. The conference is under direction of the School of Mechanical En-

: SHORTRIDGE HAS SIX IN ORATORY CONTEST

Six Shortridge High School students will, participate in| the State High School Declamation [Contest to be held Saturday at Purdue University. y Virginia Gammon and Margaret Stark will take part in the oratorical division of the contest; Helen White and Jacqueline Spalding will

Visions Sales

FBI 1S URGED TO GUARD U.S. CIVIL LIBERTY

Go Which Recalls 1918 |

Ka WEEP cn iy "+

business, basic desigh factors - in domestic and smaller stokers, and

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' Hopes Work Is Confined +1 To National Defense. (Second of a Series)

By THOMAS L. STOKES d Times Special Writer, “IW. TON, March 21. —Last tember Director J. Edgar Hoover iof the FBI re-created the “general - intelligence’ division,” with the an unced purpose of supervising Sasures to protect the | national énse,

This Struck. a familiar nou in the|

emory of many who lived thréugh ‘the World War's hectic aftermath. éy remembered the general in- . télligence division of that era, and its activity in the<“red raids” of 1819-20. 71 he division then was un--der the direct, supervision of J. Edgar Hoover, who since 1917 had ‘béen in charge of “counter-radical activities” as'a special assistant to .the Attorney General. This bit of history repeating “i

© self has disturbed some people who|

have noted with misgiving recent ; criticisms of the FBI. 'L'hey are in- “ terested: in a careful scrutiny of the general intelligence division’s activities to see that it confines itself to protecting the national defense and does not intrude on civil liberties. Submitted Statement to F. D. R. Ed Edgar Hoover, now surrounded ‘by the. glamour of the super-detec-tive, recently! told the House Appro»Ppriations Committee about the general intelligence division and ‘its work, but with no reference to that ‘ previous history. No one brought it up. He submitted a public statement -by President Roosevelt, made last . September, in which Mr. Roosevelt _ announced he:had requested the At‘torney /General to instruct the FBI “to take charge of investigative work in matters relating to espion- _ age, sabotage, and violations of the ‘neutrality regulations,” and was resquesting “all| police officers, sheriffs, 74nd all other law-enforcement officers in th {United States promptly . ‘to turn over to. the nearest- repré- - sentative of the FBI any -informa“tion obtained by them relating to ‘espionage, counter- -espionage, A sub‘versive activities, and violations of ithe neutrality laws.” : Under this authority, Mr. Hoover revived the goniera) intelligence di‘vision. Look Explaining] its work, he said it had “initiated special investigations of ‘persons [reported upon as being active. in any subversive activity or An movements detrimental to the in..ternal security.

a Suspicion Aroused. * ‘The broad language about “move‘ments detrimental to the internal security” has aroused some sus- : «picion among labor and liberal - ‘groups, which point out that there “1s no authority in law for any such general, vaguely -defined activity. ‘: Mr. Hoover used: this identical Janguage in his wo tee: ap- ; ‘pearances, “first in-“‘Novethber - in ;seeking a deficiency fund of $1475,1000 for “nativnal defense work,” and second in January in asking $2,488,1% gor national-defsnse activities!

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Vincent P. Bradley . “Un“tapped field of home buyers here.”

Vincent P. Bradley, Trénton, N. J., realtor, yesterday told the-first session of the Indianapolis Real Estate Board’s 1940 Educational Congress that “there is a huge unseratched field of home buyers here.” Speaking at the Columbia Club, Mr, Bradley said he had questioned many persons here who rent their homes and found that only one in 17 ‘had beén asked to buy a home. “It is startling to-learn that the group you would expect to buy last actually is buying first,” he said. “I mean the people who are ‘making from $18 to $20 a week are buying more real estatq than any other group. ” “This is the grandest time to be in the real estate business. that I have known in more than 30 years. The Ameérican people are sold on buying real estate. ‘They aré doing more buying, more building and more modernizing than ever before in the country’s history.”

in the year beginning next July 1. He revealed in January that he now had 350 men detailed to Jailonal= defense work.

“We have also organized) » he tes- ||

tified, “what is,chlled a translation section, the object being to keep in touch with any subversive foreignlanguage communications, ments, or papers obtained by us in the course of our investigations.” In this section, and in the index of suspected persons, the FBI chief is following the pattern of the old general intelligence division. Three and a half months after it was organized it had compiled a. list of 60,000 names, and this was later increased to- 200,000 The effect of a broadside invitation to report suspected persons is demonstrated in the flood of complaints now pouring into. the FBI. In the year ending June: 30, 1938, such complaints numbered 250; in the year ending June 30, 1939, the total was 1651. Now, - Mr. Hoover said, complaints are averaging 214 a day. At that rate, the yearly total would be 78,000. - Mr. Hoover testified that only a very small percentage of the complaints have any substance. He conceded the. dangers of “witch hunting,” stressing the necessity of employing qualified {men in the FBI, and saying that the bureaw was’ mginaming. its high standards.

| NEXT—FBI getivra) intelligence . division "extends its supervision widely. .

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speak with the dramatic group, and Joan Bartley and Joan Fuller will participate in the humorous divi- |, sion, ‘ | & > | 2 2 2 i ; | Jaffe has been named presi= dent of the Shortridge Camera Club. ® 2 2 I Mrs.| Matthew Wintersi was re1 président of the Shortridge -Teacher Association this at a meeting in Caleb Mills

president and Historian; Mrs. Fred Rassman, second vice president and corresponding secretary; Don R. Knight, third vice president; Mrs. Harold Plummer, treasurer, and Miss Lois Martin, recording secre-|[a tary. | ” 8 ' Jean Huston, Gale Potee and Grace Thomson led the high honor roll at Thomas Carr Howe High School for the first six Weeks grading period. —

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linders. Weighing 3000 pounds, : could be developed to deliver 5000 horsepower, said BE. 8. Hall, aviation consultant and mechanical engineer, who described it. Mr. Hall said that improvements in current radial type airpalne engines are producing “only a -small overall gain in performance because the region of diminishing returns is being approached. He urged that a| barrel-shaped engine design be tried with & small frontal area to cut down wind drag. “You wouldnt shoot a bullet crosswise,” he declared, in characterizing thé air resistance of radial engines. If the Diesel engine described by Mr. Hall can be made practical it would cut weight per horsepower by 83 per cent and be a revolutionary advance in aviation. ;

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