Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1944 — Page 6
Rae ‘Delay Seen in Allocation _ Of Television Wave Lengths facsimile, standard broadcast, edu-
cational needs, police and fire and other services before January or
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.-It is not|
Bkely that Whe federal opmmunica- February. It will be physically imtions commission will be able to is- possible for the commissioners to IS sue its decision on the allocation of|review over 5000 pages of testimony ¥ yadio frequencies for television, FM, presented during five weeks of & hearings which ended Shere Nov. 2, ¥. : and present their complete decisions within less than eight or 10 weeks. Decisions on the allocation of : parts of the wavelength spectrum Did You Know® [will not be held up until the comr ¥ plete report is ready, since the state department is anxious to have the spectrum apportioned at the earliest possible moméhnt, so that the position of the United Sates in regard to frequency allocation will be on the record before the Pan-American radio conference scheduled to be held next year in Rio de Janlero takes
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11M place. v A a Speculation among those familiar ; nt put before a [with the testimony and with the
views ‘of the ‘FCC commissioners seems to be pretty well crystallized. It is obvious that there is just not enough space in the radio, spectrum to take care of all the requests that have been made. J On the big question of television frequency allocations, the FCC may be expected to compromise between the two groups who are conflicting over the future of television. Some want to go ahead with television in its present stage of development, believing that the present-day images on the television screen, as well as present programming, will find favor with the public, Others desire to experiment and perfect television and operate in the upper frequencies. Frequency modulation may be able to let out its belt since it will get almost double the portion of ‘the spectrum it now has, Facsimile, the system of sending pictures and even con te newspapers through the air t§ be printed in home or office, will probably be assigned to operate high up in the spectrum or dove-tailed In with other services by multiplexing. Educational broadcasters will get pretty much what they asked fof at the hearings, including the possibility of short wave for international educational broadcasting. Police and fire departments will also receive enough space to conduct their operations, with the exception of television broadcasting, on which they may be limited.
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“a BUY U, 8. WAR BONDS AND STAMPS
a
DEWEY VOTES
Casts Ballot as Lawyer While 100 Citizens ~ . Cheer Him,
(Continued From Page One)
the step-down basement flat in the middle of the block of old row houses, nodding toward Re mansion, 6 “Now and then a glimpse, maybe, as the big, black ¢ar comes down the hill and through the gate, but that's about all. “Not that we see Mrs. Dewey, either. She has the two boys, of course, and they keep her busy, and maybe she thinks she's a stranger here yet, but she doés look grand in the pictures, surely, now doesn’t she? “Al Smith, God rest him, was the one we saw most. He'd be out all the time with the kids, talking and playing with them there by the big fron gates And down at the mass at our church on-Sunday, and. Mrs, Smith with him, “Governor Roosevelt we'd see sitting out in the sun on the porch, and at night—11 o'clock it might|j
the dog down to the park. “When the Mr, and Mrs. Door were celebrating their 50th] wedding anniversary — he's . dead
has moved away since—djdn't Governor Lehman come over like all the neighbors.and join in congratulatin’ and celebratin’? He was a great one for walking around the place, friendly-like, smoking his pipe. Mrs. Lehman would come visiting, too. -
Governor Busier Now
“But mostly there was no war in those days, and the governor is busier now, I suppose. That's what my man Says. “They're mostly Democrats up here on the hill, but the Republicans will get some votes this year, myself, there’s just one thing I wonder about and that's who'll win the war first and bring my boy back home to me. Both of them say they will, of course, but how can I know? What do you think ” A couple doors away a workingman, his wife beside him, gestured with a trowel. “We'll vote for him, all right,” the man said, glancing at the big brick house on the hill. “But not many tip there will. Politics and government’s the main business here, y'see, and a lot of them will be voting for the Democrats to save their jobs. The O'Connell machine runs Albany. Why, wasn't I talking to a fireman at the corner store there Sunday, and I ask him how he's
going to vote. Too Many on Payroll
“He says, ‘Me on the payroll and you ask me that? How long do you think my job would last if I didn’t vote Democratic?’ So that's the way it is, too many on the payroll. But it's Dewey gets my vote.” “Sure,” sald his wife, “The Gov-
ernor comes and goes, but I'm not
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{| children I see playing when they're
wa | the South in 1864,
one to be sitting by the window, watching. T'm not a sitter, I'm not.” } The woman who ran the corner delicatessen and who said, no, Mrs. ‘Dewey had never been In,. was plainly for Mr. Roosevelt. . “The speeches,} she objected. “No one should be talking so hard about the President. Aren't men too old for that? Aren't we in a civilized country?” ‘ In the red, box-like brick house next door to the mansion a young Italian girl talked earnestly. A curly-haired child about: 3, played beside her on the kitchen floor. “Who'll bring my hushand home first after this war?” she said, “he’s in the marines. Away a year now, and when he got 72-hour leave from his camp in North Carolina in June, I went all the way to Washington to meet him. “I have trouble knowing who to vote for. I see the governor's car going in and out beside our house, and from an upstairs room I get a good view of the whole place. The
home from school. : “Well, whoever wins will be doing the best he can for us, I guess. Do you think Dewey will make it?” That's the way it was today on Eagle st. in Albany. And that’s the
their votes.
‘Shorten the War,’ Dewey Urges
mitted his candidacy for presidency of the United States to the nation’s voters today with an appeal for a Republican victory “to shorten the war” and lay the ground work for post-war peace and prosperity. That was the theme of his final message closing the first wartime political campaign in America since civil strife divided the North against
INN. Y, CITY,
ally was slow in gaining momentum, there were some exceptions. Fifteen per cent of the registered voters had made their choices in the rural communities of New York's Suffolk county by 9-a.m. (Indianapolis time),
be less than in 1940, due to the gbserice of men in the armed forces, but wartime industrial shifts may increase the size of the vote in some localities,
Colorado, Utah, Kansas and Texas altfiough it was not expected to have much inuflence on the voting trend.
tremely heavy in highly. industrial-
be—Mr. Roosevelt would be walking |vania, some polling places were pil{ing up votes at the rate of “one a Next minute.”
were - exercising their secret ballot these two years now, and herself rights in 140,408 voting precincts.
democracy. The men and women of the armed services, have been voting for weeks and most of their ballots are sealed now waiting for the polls to be closed before being
RT
INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —
UJ SDUAY, LM ;
. THE
War Workers Crowd Polls in N. Y., Chicago, Detroit, Dallas, Other Industrial Centers
next. Maine elected its three members of the house—all Republicans —and a Republican governor last Atlanta, Nashville, Birmingham and September. There was no 1944 New Orleans. 2 senatorial election in Maine, Pirst of the election day principals] The campaign finally ended last to vote was. Governor John W. night shortly before midnight with Bricker of Ohio, the Republican vice both presidential candidates 3 “the presidential*.nominee. He became | radio in last minute appeals, which the 111th voter to receive a ballot|primarly were for all eligible citiin his Columbus, O., precinct. zens to get to the polls today. Dewey Although the rurdl voting gener-(is voting in New York. President Roosevelt will vote in Hyde Park. The President to be elected today and the new 79th congress will determine domestic and foreign policfes for the next two years when there will be another election—this time with congressional seats the only federal jobs at stake.
Standings in Congress
Democrats have nominal control of both senate and house as the ballots are cast today. But, actually, an anti-New Deal coalition of Republicans and Democrats has been dominant on’ Capitol Hill for the past two years—and occasionally before. that. Here are the standings as of today: Senate: Democrats 58, cans 37, Progressives 1. House: Democrats 214, cans 212, Progressives 2, Labor 1, American-Labor 1, cant 5. Safe southern seats among those at stake today assure continued numerical superiority in the senate for the Democratic party, although administration control will continue to be in jeopardy. But Republicans insist that they will win the house this year. It is conceded that they have brighter prospects now than at any time since Mr. Roosevelt be= came the Democratic leader. One of the side issues of this campaign has been the possibility that the President, in a close contest, might squeak.through but that the house would go Republican. In that event Mr. Roosevelt would have to deal with Republicans if he could deal with the house at all.
Issues of Campaign
Political morality, individual veracity and age have fired this campaign with bitter issues. Dewey’s 531 electoral votes. challenge to the “tired and quarrel- * some ‘old men” has aroused Mr. Both Sides Confident Roosevelt's supporters to ridicule
National Democratic Chairman |the governor's youth. Robert E. Hannegan predicted that Mr. Roosevelt is 62 and Dewey is Mr. Roosevelt would do better than 20 years younger, Senator Harry 8. he did in 1940 when he carried 38) Truman (D. Mo), Who was nomistates. Herbert Brownell Jr, na-|nated as Mr. Roosevells running tional Republican chairman, said|mate after the President decided not only that Governor Dewey Henry A. Wallace might be a politwould be elected, but that Repub- ical liability, is 60 years old. Goylicans would not “concede a single|ernor John W. Bricker of Ohio runs
state, outside the solid South.” with Dewey, He is 51.
State laws already have assured| Wallace, who almost won rethat the service vote will be de- nomination despite the demand of
layed in 11 states. In any photo- big city political leaders that he finish election this year the winner |Dbe discarded, has been an also-ran
(Continued From Page One) awaited the opening of the polls in
Most states expected the vote to
Rain Seen in Four States Y Rain was reborted or predicted in
RepubliEarly voting also was reported ex- RepubliFarmer-
In western Pennsyl- Va-
zed Detroit.
Throughout the country, citizens
Rare, Rigid Test 1t is a rare and rigid test of our
tallied. Poll takers foresee the closest presidential contest stnee 1916 when Charles Evans Hughes, Republican, lost by a whisker to Woodrow Wilson, Democrat. A score of states are listed as close or doubtful. The absentee service vote may be decisive in any of them, including big New York and Pennsylvania. The winner needs at least 266 of the
defeated Herbert C. Hoover 472 to
getter as the: fourth term Democratic candidate,
electoral vote for him. And this
way it was all over America, mil-|§ lions of people getting ready to cast
ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 7 (U, P).—| | Governor Thomas E. Dewey sub-|}
conceivably .might not be known until the last of the late-tally states have been reported. The last is North’ Dakota, which makes its fin service ballot count on Dec. 7. Officials estimate that 4,894,225 service ballots were distributed and that 2,856,993 will be returned for counting. New York already has announced that 411,128 service ballots had been received‘ by the statutory state deadline which was yesterday noon. In many states, including New York, the potential soldier vote exceeds the number by which Mr, Roosevelt led the late ‘Wendell kb Willkie, in 1940. States in which the service ballot
lengths of time are California, Colorado, Florida, Masyland, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah and
| Washington. They aggregate 123
electoral votes. Thousands Seek Offices
In addition to the presidency and vice presidency, this election will choose 432 members of the house of representatives, 36 U. 8. senators, 31 governors and literally thousands of lesser official. One of the 36 senate seats is for a meaningless twomonth term which expires with the present 78th congress on Jan. 3,
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LORISTS
campaigner this season, traveling on his own time and money and atidressing audiences small or large, wherever he could find them. Wallace is shooting at 1948, if political observers are right, and believes that the radical-conserva-tive cleavage which almost divided the New Deal-Demacratic party
become effective four years hence. It is not conceivable that Wallace sees himself as a potential leader of a party which includes the democracy of the Solid south...
Predicts FDR's Victory
His praise of Truman, if any, has been temperate. But Wallace is whooping it up for Mr. Roosevelt and predicts his re-éléction by 100 or more electoral votes. Such a tally would be close in comparison with any of Mr. Roosevelt's three previous contests. He
59 electoral votes; Alf M. Landon 523 to 8; and Willkie 140 to 82, There never was such a vote-
In his three contests only two states—Maine and Vermont—have failed to cast an
year even Maine is classed by the poll takers as “pivotal,” which is occupational slang for “close-and-we-don’t-know."” : All but 11 other states have cas their votes threz times in succession for Mr. Roosevelt against the! three Republican candidates put up so far. - Those which have gone along with the President twice are: Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Michigan, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Delaware and New Hampshire,
WAR FRONTS
(Nov. 7, 1944) PACIFIC—Japanese radio reports two American Superfortresses over Tokyo area while carrier planes report destruction of 191 Japanese planes and blasting of eight or more ships in raids on Manila area.
WESTERN FRONT—Americin and German armored forces slug it out in streets of tiny Vossenack, 25 miles southwest of Cologne, in preliminary to winter battle of
have killed or captured 8,590,000 German troops on eastern front, Stalin discloses as Red forces engage in great tank battle outside Budapest.
AIR WAR—British bombers ‘raid Coblenz and Glensenkirchen.
ITALY—Activity increases all along frogt with improving weather and Polish troops of 8th army occupy several villages on Rimini~-Bologna highway.
«
FURIOUS FIGHT RAGES BEFORE. COLOGNE
(Continued
and forth along the principal eastwest street in the town. A strong German counter-attack threw Lt. Gen, Courtney Hodges’ American 1st army troops out of Vossenack yesterday. But the Americans quickly rallied and fought their way back ‘into the town. American and ° German blazed away at each other from a range of several hundred yards or less
Most of the
ruins. . In eastern France, Lt. Gen, Jacob L. Devers’ 6th army group con-!off the wings and- he was unhurt,
Rhineland. Sostes NEW —SWIFT RUSSIA—Victor i : : SO ra uD ECONOMICAL
BACK AT HIS JOB
VINEYARD HAVEN, Mass. (U.P). —As ships go, the 66-year-old twomaster Coral is quite ancient, but not as old as its new skipper, Capt.}
birthday. Bored with life ashore after following the sea from boy~ hood, Capt. Zeb bought the Coral
RETIRED SEA CAPTAIN
Zebulon Tilton; who will be 78 next |
{ oc: |
| FALL C
the other day and is resuming his
'FLANNER UCHANAM
tinued its slow but steady progress through the foothills of the Vosges. mountains, | Berlin reported yesterday that the 6th army group had begun a
© dr th From Page One) breakthrough® drive through e
quars refused to comment.
SILVER WINGS SAVE FORTRESS NAVIGATOR
~ CHICAGO (U.P.).—8econd Lt Edwin L. Harris, 20, a B-17 navigator in Italy, owes his life to his silver wings. He wrote his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Roy E. Harris, Chi~ cago, that on a mission to Odertal, . Germany, a piece of flak went town already was In|through his side of the plane, ; through his heavy flying suit and hit his pair of wings. It bounced
tanks
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