Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1943 — Page 5

PAGE 5

RY ECR (RL) 3%

* THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ROME RAID COST|' Hefty Fellow Sat on My Head

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 4, 1048 University

EXPAND NEW AIR TRAINING SETUP

Command of Gen. Curry j 1 Now to Include Half of

Continental U. S.

DENVER, Aug. ¢ (U. P.).—The army air forces technical training command of Maj. Gen. John F. Curry was expanded yesterday to include virtually half of the continental area of the United States.

The Denver district headquarters of the AAFTC announced that the new command will include stations in Texas and Oklahoma, as a result of the recent consolidation of the old technical training command and the flying command into the army air forces training command. Curry will have command of the technical and basic training centers at Sheppard field, Tex, ang the mechanics’ school and basic train ing center at Amarillo, Tex. It includes also the detachments at the uthwestern Institute of Tech- ‘ at Weatherford, Okla, the modification center at Ft. Worth, Tex, the installation point at Oklahoma City, Okla., as well as other college detachments and mobile training units. The installations formerly were Winder the third district with headquarters at Tulsa, Okla. which, along with the fifth district at Miami, Fla., have been dissolved. he Denver headquarters now cofftrols technical training of the 16 western states.

air forces in

GIRL DROWNS IN SIGHT OF FATHER

WABASH, Aug. 4 (U., P).—The frolicking of Morey Webb and his 9-year-old daughter, Betty, while swimming in the Wabash river yesterday ended abruptly when the girl relaxed her grip while riding on her father’s back, slipped into the stream and drowned. Authorities said the current swept the girl bemgath the surface of the water beTore Webb could grab her.

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May Leave

Dr. Herman B Wells

Dr. Herman B Wells, president of Indiana university, and Dr. Herman T. Briscoe, vice president of

the university, are expected to receive appointments to high government offices in Washington soon. Although no official announcement has been made, it was reported yesterday that both the university’s officials had been urged to take federal posts and that the university board of trustees had granted the educators leaves of absence to accept appointments. Dr. Wells was said to be slated for appointment to the U. S. state department as economic advisor for occupied enemy countries and Dr. | Briscoe was reported to be in line {for appointment as chief of the {war manpower commission's divi|sion of professional and technical training. Ora L. Wildermuth,

of Gary,

president of the I. U. board of trus-|

1. U.'s Drs. Wells and Briscoe Get High War Post Bids

Dr, Herman T. Briscoe

tegs, announced last night that the board had granted leaves to the officials provided they could return to Bloomington every week to keep the university's affairs in order. Dr. Briscoe would succeed Dr. Edward C. Elliott, president of Purdue university, who resigned from the WMC several weeks ago. Dr. Wells would act as an administrator of economic programs in enemy countries after they are occupied by allied armies. The university president declined to comment on reports of his expected appointment, explaining that he had received no official information about it. He did not deny, however, that such an appointment was being negotiated. Dr. Briscoe left Bloomington last Saturday for Washington, presumly to confer with WMC Director ul V. McNutt about the appointment.

J0B RECRUITING RALLY PLANNED

116,000 Volunteer Canning Workers to Be Sought

At Andersen.

Times Special

ANDERSON, Ind, Aug. 4-—-A manpower mobilization rally to recruit between 16000 and 18,000 workers for canning factories dur|ing the coming tomato season will {be held here Tuesday afternoon. Selected by the war manpower commission as the center of the Midwest's tomato growing area, {Anderson will set the example for lother towns to follow in securing {volunteers during the peak canning seasons. The rally is under the supervision of the local WMC and the office of the U. S. employment service. Rally speakers will be Governor |Schricker; Dean William H. Spencer {of Chicago, regional director of the |WMC, and Mayor C. D. Rotruck.

2500 Enlisted

Workers from the office of civilian defense and local service clubs will aid in registering the volunteers who will gather in the court house square. Sa far some 2500 workers have | been enlisted for the canning seaison, and officials of the employment 'service expect to fill their quota from the ranks of housewives, high school girls and others who do not need the money but who realize

{that the nation’s food production | | The Allegheny-Ludlum Steel Corp. | The rally will be covered by news- |

{must not lag. {reel men from the five major motion picture. corporations, and the | pictorial review of the campaign {Will be shown both in this country |and to U. S. soldiers overseas.

KEEP WAR EFFORT

| phase of the war effort, about which | you know, tell it to the FBI or police, Curtis Hodges of the local of(fice of civilian defense, told em|ployees of L. Strauss & Co, today. { Mr. Hodges said rumors about war | production, military plans and in- | ternal difficulties such as race con- | flicts were “good news for the axis.” |He said an important reason for not talking carelessly was the fact that 32 saboteurs, recently graduated from the Nazi sabotage school

{near Berlin, might be loose in the!

i }

United States. Six from the same

nu- | School already have been put to

death at Washington.

' AUSTRALIA SEEKS ZONE OF SECURITY

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If you have to talk about some

Sgt. Frosch in Sicily Invasion

SGT. WILLIAM H. FROSCH JR, former WISH radio announcer here, was with the allied invasion troops when they landed in Sicily, according to a letter just received by his mother, Mrs. William H. Frosch, 76 N. Irvington ave. His letter stated that his outfit landed about three hours after the first shock troops hit the beaches. “We had no sooner jumped out of our landing barge than a dive bomber came out of nowhere to strafe us. It was quite a show but things have quieted down now and we are kept busy seeing that supplies keep moving up to the front,” his letter stated.

Sgt. Frosch is with the quartermaster corps.

THREE CONGRESSMEN GET C. I. 0. INVITATION

Two Democratic and one Republican congressmen have been invited to attend the state C. I. O. political action organization meeting at Kokomo Aug. 8. They are Ray Madden (D. Gary), Louis Ludlow (D. Indianapolis) and Charles LaFollette (R. Evansviile), whom union officials said have “excellent records for supporting the president and the war effort.” Over 500 C. I. O. delegates will meet to organize the union for polit-

BUYS FORGE COMPANY PITTSBURGH, Aug. 4 (U. P).—

has acquired the C. B. S. Steel and Forge Co. of Los Angeles, Cal.

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ONLY 3 PLANES

Total of 521 Bombers Took Part, Dropping 1101 Tons

Of Explosives.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (U. P). —Only three planes out of 521, one crew of which was rescued, were lost in the raid on Rome in which 272 heavy bombers and 249 medium bombers dropped 1101 tons of bombs, the war department revealed today. The department described it as the heaviest daylight bombing attack of the war to date and reported that photographs revealed “extremely successful results with excellent concentration in the target areas.” Details of the Rome raid were included in a war department review of the air war over Sicily and Italy in July during which American and British air forces, collaborating with ground and naval forces “cleared the Sicilian sky of the enemy's planes, blasted his air fields to the point of uselessness, and pulverized his lines of communications.” Spaatz in Charge “In the four weeks ending July 26, United States planes flew 12,583 offensive sorties, dropped 12,460 tons of bombs, destroyed 342 enemy planes and probably destroyed 54 others, probably sank three enemy ships and damaged 10 more, with a loss of 190 United States aircraft,” the war department said. The air offensive was waged by the northwest African air forces commanded by Lt. Gen. Carl A. Spaatz, and the United States army 9th air force of which Maj. Gen. Lewis H, Brereton is commanding general,

1000 DROWN IN INDIA BOMBAY, Aug. 4 (U, P.).—More than a thousand persons were killed in floods which swept through Ajmer Merwara state, in Central India, on July 30, it was announced today at Ajmer, the capital.

*

interview today. “I felt as though some hefty fellow were sitting tight on my head, pushing me back from the way the plane was going and when I tried to lift my arm, it was so heavy I thought I would need a crane,” he said. lead.” Before starting the dive at 43,000 feet, Hough said, he could see “practically the whole of England spread out under me on a perfect English day.” Hough's record dive was disclosed by the U. S. army yesterday. He repeated the performance, attaining a similar speed, in a Thunderbolt fighter last February. He is technical director of the 8th U. S. air force fighter command.

Quick Decision

Hough said he decided on the spur of the moment “after breakfast” to make the first power dive. “After reaching the ceiling, I just put the nose down and went toward the earth, gradually attaining maximum speed. I was diving for 25 seconds at 1000 feet a second. “In the middle—at 15 seconds—I took my hands off the controls, It was a bit risky, I admit, but I was writing data and my eyes were glued on the instruments, which told the speed and other things. “I wasn’t conscious of any particular sensation, When I got within 18,000 feet of the ground, I guessed it was time to pull out.” Hough in peactime is president of an air rifle company.

PEDESTRIAN DEATHS RISE LOS ANGELES (U. P.).—Largely as a result of blackout and dimout regulations, pedestrian deaths rose 60 per cent in this city during the

month of May as against May of last year.

“My whole body felt like

During 780-Mile-an-Hour Dive’

LONDON, Aug. 4 (U. P.) —Every- ' thing went gray when he pulled out : of a T780-mile-an-hour dive in a : Lightning fighter at 18,000 feet in : September, 1942, but he never lost |. consciousness, Lt. Col. Cass Hough, | 36, of Plymouth, Mich, said in an @

Lt. Col. Cass Hough

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Croan Greenough

Is Commissioned

CROAN GREENOUGH, son of Mr. and Mrs, Walter Greenough, 556 E. Fall Creek blvd., has been commissioned an ensigh in the naval reserve, and his wife has joined the WAC, Formerly director of the Indiana university personnel division, Ensign Greenough has recently been assistant to the president of Teachers insurance and annuity association of America. He was graduated from Indiana university in 1935 and has an A. M. degree from Harvard university. From 1937 to 1941 he was on the I. U. administrative and instructional staff and went to New York in 1941. Mrs... Greenough, the former Doris Decker, of Decker Chapel, graduated from Indiana university in 1936. Prior to her marriage in 1940, she taught school in Indiana.

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SYDNEY, Aug. 4 (U. P.).—Australia will seek a southwest Pacific zone of security against aggression in co-operation with the Umted if | States, Great Britain, France, Holland and Portugal after the war, Dr. H. V. Evatt, minister of external affairs, said today. | Australia has been converted into #l la great nation through its war efiort| #7 { land will have certain responsibilities | % to protect the arc of islands to the north and develop Australian inter- | | ests in the Pacifie, Evatt declared in “| lan election campaign speech at || | Barton.

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