Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 September 1944 — Page 13

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Red or

~~ Goes Into Second

Attack Day

Report Task Fi

In Philippines. i «| Hones raised by unofficial rePhilippines. . ports tist.the 2nd army had estab(Continued From Page Oney:~. ‘lished &-tenuous link. with-the Asp-

; 1 {hem y by the enemy ‘air strength in the central dispatch from the Arnhem area and|

“much damage was done to military

objectives on and adjacent to Clark{Lt. Gen. George 8 ._ field and Nichols field, and to the

fields themselves.” Losses Are Listed

The communique listed Japanese campaign, After

ship losses as follows:

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days Re subsequent lack of any report lays) ny 1 ‘| British - artillery had reached .the

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Germany. of Aachen a counter-attack Gellenkirchen was repulsed Southeast

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up toward Arghem. {slowly but steadily on all fronts, 8b- |neaviest blows in the North Hol.

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line facing the Belfort gap as the allies and Germans in thelr

and apparently swinging their land sector and on the Moselle, i

Artillery Shells Nazis = "| ©

Pooled dispatches flied late yesterddy from the Arnhem sector said

area just south of the Rhine estusault positions around the beleaguered sky troops. 2 United Press War Correspondent Ronald Clark reported from the 2d army front that increasing numbers of British tanks, with American para ang British infantrymen riding their turrents, wers across the Nijmegen bridge to join in the battle of the north. Clark revealed that many of the German divisions rushed over from

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MARINE CORPS: UNIT INSTALLS: OFFICERS

nH »

+ High Officials; Ouster 7. Ordebed in, 1940, “(Continued From Page Oney been allowed to remain here because of the Soviet government's refusal to allow her return to her native Russia. : I “This is ‘the second time in two years that Washington has given

special consideration to the Browder family.

ordered Earl Browder released from Atlanta penitentiary, where he had served a year and two months of a four-year sentence for fraudulent acquisition and use of an American passport. «Mr; Roosevelt said the sentence

3 offenses. and that Mr. pwder's | release would “have a fey’ $0 promote national unity Arig any feeling which may

——

xist in some minds that the un-

usually long sentence was by way of penalty imposed on him because of

| “Mr. Browder had gone to prison

during the period of the NasziSoviet mon-aggression pact, when Afperican Communists were strongly josed: to’ this: country’s foreign icy. The party line changed after Germany. went to war against

The 500-mile detachment, marine corps league, installed officers last ‘night at its regular meeting.— They are: . Harold N. Perkins, commandant; Edward Kitchum, senior vice commandant; William Houchins, junior vice commandant; Roy Damaree, judge advocate; Charles Depke, chief of staff; Lester Mulkey, ser-geant-at-arms; = Eunice Bertran, and Charles Bourne, ad-jutant-paymaster,

" The detachment is open fo ma-!

rines in active duty, at home or abroad, and honorably discharged marines, as well as members of the maring corps women's reserve. Meetings are held at 8 p, m. each Thursday night in the Frank Stray-

er post hall, at the corner of Dela-|

ware and Ohio sts.

Mrs, Browder’s case goes back to { Oct. 31, 1940, when Attorney General | Robert H. Jackson, now on the su-

{preme court, ordered her deported {on the basis of her own testimony | describing her surreptitious entry in 1933 from Canada. In the previous three years, according to records here, she had béen librarian in the Lenin school ir Moscow, where Communist tac-

{tics are taught. Deportation Blocked

Attorney General Jackson refused |

to suspend .the deportation order in 1040 because of doubt of her t eligibility for leniency, her failure {to remove doubt and “the evasive { character of her testimony” regard{ing her relationship to the Comimunist party. | Justice department officials later | said steps would be taken to deport her, but the Soviet government blocked this. On April 5, 1944, the justice department announced that the board of immigration appeals had withdrawn the deportation order. Mrs. Browder then applied to the

ert’ J. Bulkley, an Ohio New Dealer.

In May, 1942, President Roosevelt |

state department for a viss which| . [would permit legal entry, and ‘berj .. ....

case was considered. by two interdepartmental committees, one primary and the other a review 'com-

The wine Sou wid s wit} Tf

against granting her a visa. The review committee voted 4 to 1 against granting a visa. The case then was carried to the board ‘of appeals ion visa cases, whose chairman is Ex-Senator Rob-

The other member is Judge Milton J. Helmick. Prof. Robert Gooch; formerly of the University of Virginia, is an alternate. ’

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