Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1945 — Page 7
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SATURDAY, OCT. 13, 1948
Inside Indianapolis
THE RT. REV. MSGR. HENRY F. DUGAN, better known as Father Dugan, unofficially has been labeled by hundreds as the “salt of the earth” in Indianapolis. Officially, however, he’s the chancellor of the Catholic archdiocese of Indianapolis and the righthand man to the Most Rev, Joseph E. Ritter, archbishop, the city’s highest Catholi¢ dignitary. ; ' He rapidly has gained the reputation as one of the city’s outstanding churchmen and civic leaders. Whenever there is a Catholic event of any importance in this community, Father Dugan is one of the participants, Frequently he is called upon to celebrate festival masses and just last Sunday he helped chant compline at St. Joan of Arc Catholic church. At the installation of Archbishop Ritter last December Father Dugan read the official decree in both Latin and English, As chaplain of Ladywood school out on Millersville rd., he has the distinction of having only women in his parish. And his duties there begin before daylight. He rises at 5 every morning and an hour later holds mass -for the girls and nuns at the school,
The Ladywood girls and the women in the arch-
diocese hold him in highest esteem and seem to hang on his words of wisdom. But he definitely is a man’s man, * Father Dugan is very impressive looking, aristoeratic and gracious. He's in his middle 50s and has a well-bujl} . physique. No matter what time of the day he is seen, he always looks extremely wellgroomed.
A True Irishman : HE'S A true Irishman, with both his mother and father coming from the land of the shamrocks., His father was one of the early pioneers here and worked for a number of years at Kingan'’s. But Father Dugan Himself is a native Hoosier, He was born and reared in Indianapolis and in his early days lived on S. California st. When he was 4 his parents died and his uncle, John Dugan, a saloon keeper in the old days, brought him up. He attended St. Anthony's grade school, went to Manual high school two years, transferred to St. Mary's college in Kentucky and then attended St. Meinrad seminary. In 1916 he was ordained in the priesthood. 7 All through life Father Dugan ahd the Very Rev. Msgr. Bernard Sheridan, pastor of 8t. John’s church, have been side by side. They were classmates from the time they entered grade school until they were ordained. Only one year their junior at the time of their ordination was Archbishop Ritter. The only time Msgr, Sheridan and Father Dugan parted company in their studies was when Father Dugan did "post-graduate work at the Catholic University of America in Washington. That was back in 1923-25, when the Indianapolis chancellor worked on his doctor's degree in canon law. But now the two classmates are back together again in the same office at 128 W. Georgia st. Father Dugan is most business-like and eficient.” He is well known for his wit and often, even in his business conversations, breaks out in a jolly chuckle. There's no one in Indianapolis easier to make an appointment with and he does his duties Just like clockwork.
G.I. Cemeteries
FINSCHHAFEN, New Guinea.—The broken bodies of more than 60600 American youths, who fell before the enemy in the Pacific's savage warfare, lie peacefully here in the cool earth of a great new cemetery. The fragile, solemn beauty of their final resting place stands in sharp relief against a hillside, riotous in the wild colors of the Jungle. There are boys here who died at Buna, Milne Bay, Oro Bay and Lae—<whosé blood flowed at Saidor, Hollandia, Biak and Aitape ~—those for whom the war came to a bitter end on Los Negros and New Britain. Here, too, were brought the bodies of men who first had been buried hastily in the jungle during combat, and before the final boundaries of this 40-acre burial ground are laid, it will hold the bodies of those who fell in the Solomon Islands.
Consolidate Cemeteries CONSOLIDATION of American cemeteries in this area began last December. Before that, men who died in battle were buried in temporary cemeteries scattered throughout this section of the Pacific.
Many of the bodies, disinterred from small iso-
lated plots, were flown here and others were brought
Aviation
I CANNOT understand why the airlines ever believed they had to inherit the ticket-window procedure, forms and pen and pencil work of the railroads. Some time ago we had assurances, not only from the air lines, but from the manu- A facturers of automatic computing machines (comptometers and cash registers, that seem to do everything but warn you audibly that your hair-do is askew) that the pens and pencils would be banished from the air lines ticket counter, It's true that the air lines have been pressing the office-machinery manufacturers, but whether or not the air lines have presented specifications of just exactly what they want, I do not know.
I am -told, the other hand, that the accounting and office machinery people are conducting all kinds of experimental work to provide mechanized equipment for the air line ticket counter,
on
Is Obsolete Stuff
AT ANY rate, we've got to get rid of the pens and pencils and the handwriting work at the air line ticket counter. That stuff is obsolete. Let's start at the beginning of the air line ticket operation—the purchase of a ticket. (The latest de~ velopment is a ticket that is filled out on what looks like a small-sized typewriter.) Then there is a lot of conversation between the prospective traveler and the ticket counter attendant. What is your weight? If this information is ime portamt to the alr line (and it is, since the law permits air line to carry only so much pay load) then the
§
air lines are getting inaccurate information.
My Day
HYDE PARK, Friday Today I want to. talk to you about something which came to me the other from a member of a U. 8. O. entertainment group had
been in both Italy and Germany very recently, These entertainers are young. They have » perhaps & better opportunity than ss
i §
iE: 5
ik :
of course, “you Americans
sp
| ‘Hoosier Profile
Father Dugan
Before coming to the chancery office in 1834 he taught in Evansville from 1916 to 1920 and was professor of St. Mary-of-the-Woods college from 1920-23. In 1926 he became chaplain and professor at Ladywood. His chancery office is the clearing house for all Catholic parishes in the diocese, and he sees to it that the program of the diocese is carried out to the ‘nth degree. But his work doesn't stop there, He has just as many civic duties as religious ones.
Inaugurated Forum HIS HOBBY, the Catholic forum, has grown into one of the city's outstanding events. He instituted the forum here and, helps bring speakers from all over the country to discuss topics of world-wide interest. The forum, he says, is one of his “big worries.” Father Dugan is another of the city's prominent Red ‘Cross workers and helps direct the activities of the organization. He's very much interested in music and is a member of the advisory board of the Indianapolis Symphony orchestra. At his home he has quite a collection of classical music.
When he finds some spare time he likes to wander around the grounds near his home or do a little gardening. In the winter he enjoys reading—especially biographical or autobiographical books and current events. And in the summer on his vacation he just likes to loaf. He smokes cigars on and off the job and once in a while changes to a cigaret. Father Dugan has as many friends among the laymen as he does in religious circles. And some of his closest associates are Protestants. But no matter who they are, they all think he’s one of the most wonderful men they ever met. One of them sums it up this way: “He's an example for all those who know him and for all those who don't.”
By Gerald R. Thorp
in by ship. Then they were laid gently in olivedrab metal caskets and buried once again. Only one section of the cemetery has been completely landscaped at this writing, but it reveals in miniature the quiet beauty that soon will be reflected from all the area. P Often-painted white crosses rise rigidly in unbroken lines from the sweeping blanket of brilliant green. Two white stone pillars guard the coral road leading to the entrance. On the base of a chalkwhite flagpole is a bronze plaque with the inscription, “In Memory of Our Fallen Comrades.”
Knew Many of Them
THE MAN who has directed the cemetery project, Lt. Col. M. C. Trub, San Antonio, Tex. walked slowly past the crosses, stopping now and then to examine the name plates. “I remember this man well” he said, softly. “I~ buried him.- He was one of the port engineers, killed in a bombing raid—and this sergeant was shot by an enemy sniper.” ~ The colonel talked some more, recalled something about almost every man who had been buried in that row. For these were men with whom he had lived, men who had died near here. In the quiet of the morning we could hear the waves of the Pacific splashing gently on the shore 200 yards away. From the ridge behind the crosses came the eerie, thrilling song of a bird of the tropics. There were no ugly sounds of battle. The war had moved on and left its warriors here in peace.
By Major Al Williams
A man will tell his exact weight, but I doubt all the answers from the opposite sex on this touchy subject. To settle the weight question beyond controversy, why not install a platform in the floor before the counter, with a dial facing the countér attendant. This does away with conversation, and conversation takes time. Then there is the passing of money by the traveler, and the digging around in drawers for change by the clerk. Cash registers, please, at this particular point, equipped and geared to handle air line ticket matters. '
More Handwriting “THERE 1S the business of acquiring the traveler's home address. Why? This is another time-wasting opgration. Obviously, the request for this information is a holdover from the very earliest days in air line transportation, when he had accidents. FPurthermore, I suspect that this is information desired by the air lines’ sales promotion department, to be filed and never used. It should be ruled out because it means more handwriting. Now for the refund for the passenger who has changed his mind, or whose flight was canceled due to bad weather, This is certainly the place for a modern cash register, where the punching of a couple of keys would account for the amount withdrawn
from the cash drawer for refund, along with a dupli-!
cate receipt. Now for the air line insurance forms which are made out in pencil with. a carbon copy. Air line passengers can purchase $5000 in insurance for 25 cents. The insurance blanks to be filled out are on a separate pad, and it takes a ticket counter attendant as long to make out one of these forms as is required to make out the original transportation ticket. All this lost motion again demonstrates that pens and pencils cannot duplicate the rapid, decurate work of machinery. They do not belong on an air line ticket counter, hor to this age,
By Eleanor Roosevelt
Por instance, it is quite usual for a | girl to throw herself upon the sympathy of an oe
because “she is a refugee from Russian-held terri-
tory” She sows seeds of hate against the Russians; | WIESBADEN, Germany, Oct, 13 against the Jews: against all our allies. She points (UV. P)—Gen. George 8 Patton out that “only the Germans have plumbing com- was on record today with a state asks, | ment that an “inevitable | world war probably will destroy the
parable to what you have in America.” “How could we look with anything but contempt on the French? In France, dirt and decadenge reign.” She is not quite so bitter about the British.
——
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES oo ~~ ANOTHER WAR-TIME DREAM DUE TO COME TRUE SOON = =
. ‘Colored Television Becomes a Reality
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 (U. P.).—Color television in your home is
just around the corner.
Peter Goldmark, Columbia Broadcasting System engineer, told a federal communication commission: hearing yesterday that color television sending and receiving equipment is already being manufactured. . He said samples of the first receiver sets will be available by the end
\|of January. Television pictures in
color were sent successfully last Wednesday from one New York skyscraper to another, ‘Goldmark told the commission ‘Columbia's color television tests had achieved “ghost free” reception for the first time in history due to the use of an inexpensive directional antenna and the high frequency of the color television band.
“ » . “GHOSTS” in television are
similar to echoes in radio and appear as shadows on the television screen
Black and white television has been given low frequencies in the radio spectrum, ranging from 44 to 216 megacycles, Color television, on the other hand, will work only on high frequencies between 480 and 920 kilocycles. Although low frequency television
*
is already in progress and many|television available to the public broadcasters and manufacturers are|are built on a sand foundation and ready to start turnnig out sets andican not justify continued investprograms, they are not willing to/ment and effort.”
run the risk of suddenly finding all their equipment obsolete.
. 8.» ALLEN B. DUMONT, president of Allen B, DuMont Laboratories, Inc.,
terday’s allocation of |
present plans for
television channels will be perma- |
nent for at least 10 years. “If e commission elimina
Jan, |New York television station WABD Passaic, N. J, asked FCC at yes- | to carry programs originating . in hearing to assure the Washington and that by April 1 its public and the industry that its| Washington station will also carry programs origindting in New York.
tates to go ahead on the present intends to premise unless the commission assome or all of the present sures the public and the industry commercial channels,” DuMont said, that the proposed allocation, will “...present sincere efforts to make remain at least for 10 years.”
a 4 mT DUMONT said that “shortly after
1” his company expects its
He said, however, that he “hesi-
'GHOST' HELLCAT—
Newest Navy Fighter Flies Without Pilot
WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 (U, P.), ~The navy's latest secret to come to light is the “Ghost” Hellcat— a high-powered fighter plane that flies and fights without a pilot. The navy told details of the radio-controlled plane for the first time after the army announced it had been flying B-17s without pilots as “death bomb ers” over Germany, Those bombers were worn out Flying Fortresses. They were loaded with explosives and guided by radio to crash on their targets. » » » SO FAR as is known, the Ghost Hellcat developed by the navy is the world’s only standard military aircraft for which all operations performed by a pilot— taking off, flying and landing— have been exercised by remote control. (The army air force pilotiess plane, demonstrated yesterday at Wright field, Dayton, O., was a 155-horsepower Culver scout plane, The navy Ghost Hellcat is a standard military-type fighter plane.) The plane is controlled in the take-off by a “pilot” on the ground operating a control panel set up in a truck. When the plane gets into the air, control is taken over by another “pilot” in a mother plane which guides the Hellcat on its misison, —. ~ » » RETURNING to the field the air control pilot switches over to the ground control operator after lining the ghost plane up for its approach to the runway. The ground operator then lands the plane and taxies it over to the line, The Ghost Hellcat is the product of navy experimentation which began in 1922. It is a development far superior to that used in the simpler target drones —a small pilotless aircraft used by both the army and navy for anti-aircraft training.
” = » THE DRONES, pioneered by Movie Actor Reginald Denny and developed for navy use at sea by another movie actor, Lt. Cmdr. Robert Montgomery, have only five control channels. In contrast remote control of the Hellcat is so sensitive that even as small a part as a tailwheel can be turned by radio to steer the plane on the ground. The -brakes can be governed to provide control on the runway and selection can be made of the exact degree of engine speed desired for take-off, landing or high speed combaf maneuvers. yy =» . THE NAVY did not go into details about the armament or fighting abilities of the Ghost Hellcat, It said that navy engineers ale ready have combined radio control with television to make drones an attack weapon of the “kamikaze” type. Controlled by radio from a mother plane and equipped with the mechanical eye of television, a drone can be sent crashing into targets miles away from the controlling pilot in the mother plane,
MAN, 2 WOMEN ARE ROBBED ON STREETS
Walking on Indianapolis streets last night proved risky as purse snatchers took two women’s pocketbooks and a robber took $26 from a local man. Mrs. Mary Green, 1520% Olive st., told police two teen-age youths grabbed her purse as she was walking in the 1300 block on Olive st. The purse, she said, contained her
ration books and keys. badge. He is a graduate of Butler
A man followed Mrs. Lois Monroe, 730 E. Minnesota st, to the porch of her home and grabbed her pocketbook, Mrs. Monroe reported last night. The purse contained flve ration books and $1. Howard, Gromer, 2036 N. Delaware st, told police he was walking on 22d st, between Talbott and Delaware sts, when a man approached him, put a gun against his back and robbed him of $26. With the robber was a heavy-set woman, Mr. Gromer said.
GEN. PATTON SEES U.S.
DESTROYED UNLESS—
third U. 8. unless America is “armed and prepared.” ;
By JAMES J. DOWNING United Press Staff Correspondent WRIGHT FIELD, Dayton, O, Oct. 13.—~The army air force today
gave the world a glimpse of what
which could be over in half an hour after the first attack.
Robot controlled atomic bombs, equipped with television to report progress and permit course correction, were shown to be far from impossible. The air force fair, staged to give the taxpayers an idea of what their money has gone for in the war just ended, included a demonstration of the first requisite of the “nightmare bomb” described above, the pilotless plane, That the little Culver scout plane used for demonstration yesterday nosed over and cracked up on landing was considered by army officials no more than & nuisance. The plane took off from Lockbourne
here and circled the fleld before its crackup landing at nearby Pate terson field.
Already in Action The television-equipped bomb al« ready has seen action. In use, it is dropped from the control plane in the general area of the target, The bombardier, through a televi sion transmitter in the nose of the
{bomb, watches the ground coming
up and—by remote control—corrects the bomb’s course to guide it into the proverbial pickel-barrel. Radio-contfolled bombs were used with telling accuracy in the Burma campaign to knock out bridges. Such early bombs, shown here, could be guided only to the right or left. They already are out-dated, Wright field technicians and ene gineers demonstrated for the public their conviction that a power-mad dictator of the future could launch enough robot controlled, rocket propelled, television equipped bombs to paralyze a nation’s ability to make war before the victim knew what had hit it. More Funds Wanted The exposition here, which includes a mile of exhibits and hundreds of planes, bombs and torpedoes, movie shows and working models to give the public the inside story of victory through airpower, was a frankly staged bid for more funds to continue experimentation. Senator Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D. Wyo.), a member of the powerful senate military affairs committee, and Senator Chan Gurney (R. 8. D.), a member of the same committee, said the show had demonstrated the need for continued development of our air forces. “We are going to have to spend millions to keep this work going,” sald Gurney.
‘Pilotin
a future war can ‘be like, a war . i
army air base at Columbus, O., flew”
ARMY GIVES GLIMPSE OF FUTURE WARS
g the Atom Bomb
A “peep into the future of aviation”—an unmanned radio-con-trolled plane, the army's PQ-14-B. Controls are located in a “mother” plane, a C-54 transport, sole companion of the PQ-14-B in the test. In the top photo of the series above, members of the ground crew are shown servicing the tiny plane for its flight. Middle photo pictures Maj. Douglas Whittaker of Monmouth, Ill, at the radio control board in the mother ship. Bottom picture shows the PQ-14-B during a recent test flight, with the control plane close by,
Army Unveils Aerial Secrets
By BScripps-Howard Newspapers WRIGHT FIELD, Dayton, O., Oct,
13.—This army air center today had unveiled some of its aerial war secrets, many of which were not developed in time to be usea against
the axis. Therein lay a theme expressed by Maj. Gen. Hugh J. Knerr, commanding general of the army air
I
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» # »
force air technical service command. If peacetime appropriations for technical research and development of air power had been sufficient to keep abreast of man’s ability to wage war from the air, sald Gen. Knerr, the atomic bomb might not have been needed. There even might not have been world war II, he added.
son, E. 80th st. B8gt. Peine, husband of Mrs. Mar-
fon 8. Peine, was a communications sergeant with the 63d infantry di-
area for advancing tanks,
8gt. Peine wear the heart and the .combat
purple infantry
>» HANNAH <
Three local veterans of European combat who have just entered Bill-| ings General hospital are Sgt. Rich-| ard L. Peine, 4006 Guilford ave.;| Pte. Donald I. Summers, 1515 E.| 62d st, and Sgt. Roddy M. Steven- purple heart, the combat infantry,
3 Local Combat Veterans Enter Billings Hospital
university and worked in the ac-|
counting department of the Public Service Co. of Indiana. Pfc. Summers, the son of Mrs, Christine Pruitt, has received the
badge and the unit citation and has been recommended for the bronze star,
Procuring valuable information on | nounced the liberation of 14 Indiana vision and went overseas last year. Scouting and patrol missions for the | men and women from Japanese | He was wounded when a Jerry pa- | 4th division, Pfc. Summers, was hit | prisons, They are: Pvt. Raymond [trol ambushed his squad as they during an artillery barrage in the E. Baker, Elkhart; Pvt, Amos Beach, were clearing out a mine-infested fighting in the Hurtgen Forest. He | Columbus; Cpl. Clarence J. Eaton in the service,|Jr., Howe, Cpl. Charles Paris and Machinist | Whiting,
has two brothers
3-c Jack Paris. Went to Brazil
3 HOOSIERS DEAD; 14 ARE LIBERATED
One Hoosier soldier, 1st Lt. John J. McCaffrey, Logansport, has been
reported as dead in the Pacific]
theater, and two others, 1st Lt Victor J. Lamar, South Bend, and 8. Sgt. Richdrd L. Walsh, Angola, are listed as dead in the European theater, The war department also has an-
Pfc. James E. Groat,
Pvt. George Hadley, Terre Haute; 8. Bgt. Louis G. Kolger, Richmond:
‘| authorities said reinforcements were
1'ls to be averted. ;
* TRISH CARDINAL DIES “racketeers” seeking to use the DUBLIN, Oct. 13_(U. P.) —Joseph | veterans’ organizations for their own | Cardinal MacRory, who once ‘bro-| purposes.
Cpl. Lewis E. Rayl, Kokomo: Pvt. | A veteran of the troop carrier | gion R. Roberson, St. Croix: 2d Lt.| command as an aircraft inspector, Aloysius T. Buttmann, Batesville. |8gt. Btevenson, has been based in| Sister Carmel (Florence M. | England, Prance and Holland. Later Baker), Ft. Wayne; the Rev. William | i Fitzgibbon, Loogootee; Sister [he was sent to Brazil where the | ratia (Josephine Luking) St. (army transport command was in| npary.of-the-Woods, and the Rev. {need of men to handle evacuation Clement 8. Schapker, Evansville
of wounded. .
A graduate of Shortridge high EXPECT FIREWORKS
Labor Truman Scans | New Labor Relations Plan
By FRED W. PERKINS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 ident Truman ‘is considering, advance of the. national I management parley, indorses of a labor relations plan pu licized here today by the National
ment of important disputes withe in the electrical contracting industry by a national council of 13 equally divided between manages ment and labor, . “We have not had a serious strike in the industry since the. plan went into operation,” said Robert W. McChesney, president of the contractors’ \ which is composed of 3500 ems ployers of more than 100,000 men,
MR. McCHESNEY and other association officers said the pid could be applied in other induse tries, but they emphasized its success would depend upon “union responsibility.” It devels oped that they thought it would not be successful without = “closed shop” on the worker side,
That is the question that may cause President Truman and other federal officials to hesita to recommend the pian for all industry, The government has not given a blanket indorsement te the closed shop,
The union with which the elet« trical contractors deal is the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, a big crafg tinion of the American Fedéra« tion of Labor which owns a large office building here. Head of the union is Bd J. Brown. Another officer is G. M. Bugniazet, a member of the A. P. of L. execu= tive council. o ” . WAGES IN the electrical cone tracting industry were said by Mr. McChesney to be in “the upper brackets of the construc tion trades.” Interests of the public in the matter of prices are protected by - stiff competition within the industry, he added. “What the plan amounts tn said another association officer, “is voluntary arbitration, pure and simple, within the industry.”
We, the Wo Time for Us fo
Learn to Grow Old Gracefully
By RUTH MILLETT ., PERHAPS you don't know there is a man whose specialty is teaching, others how to grow old “gracefully.” Well, there is. He's Dr. George Lawton, director of the New York City Old Age Counseling Center, Dr, Lawton also is to teach Coo« per Union's new ceurse in Aging Suocess« fully, Dr. Lawton’s theory is that the advantages to growing old stack up pretty well with the advantages of being young—if you just know how te make the most of them, 3 » » » HE THINKS every old person should have several hobbies, ons of which makes him work with his hands. For, says he, “the older person needs outlets for his emo tions not involving people.” Purthermore, he advises women? “Act your age and dress it. And if you possibly can, ‘get out of a city to grow old.”
If there is any one thing the women of America need to be taught it is how to grow old successfully,
For they have been so fright. ened of age by those who make a business of selling “youth” that each birthday after 30 is a paine ful, depressing milestone. . The older they get, the .nore furiously they work to look young. But the struggle to defeat age doesn’t fool anybody—least of all themselves. ~ ~ » THERE is nothing much sadder than the middle-aged women -—and America is full of them-— who spend their days and as much
a ds Sn AT VETERANS’ MEET
|Mr, and Mrs. John B. Stephenson, s—— [
| was a student at Indiana university | before entering the service, SOLDIERS UNLOADING CHICAGO, Oct. 13 (U. P.) .~A report of the resolutions committee | SHIPS IN BRITAIN was expected to start fireworks at | second’ day sessions of the AmeriLONDON, Oct. 13 (U. P.)~ can veterans of world war II conBritain called soldiers home from |yention today. | Europe today to help unload food| Resolutions’ of the new organizaships tied up by a dock strike tion's stand on revisions of the that has paralyzed most of the present G.. I. bill of rights, incountry’s ports. | surance changes, tax exemptions for More than 4000 troops already|yeterans and a statement of have been pul to work removing principles by the AMVETS were cargoes of vitally-needed food, but|seheduled for discussion. Milton D. Cohn, Buffalo, N, Y., president of the Disabled American Veterans, yesterday warned the 150 AMVETS delegates to beware of
needed if a serious food shortage
tested against the presence of| American trgops in northern IreMied in
Cohn also urged that AMVETS ufiite with other yeteran groups to combat .forces which he sald were to curb veteran 8.
money as they can lay their hands on, trying to buy back youth and beauty. Their eyes are old and their faces hard, marked by their discontented struggle to look younger than they are, :
If they could just relax and ad-
are over.
life, to learn new
