Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 December 1945 — Page 7

=i state ever four ministers that all he eived me in his well on his way & gentle voice : those lines ® impression of £ Life for him Yai -thare 18 between Bede i master of the and runs s Communists is Yay. system. Thelr five more than political bureau a ine Poth Hoosier pastime of politics as kid when he used to s in the organi~ in on the front-room caucuses his father held him, constitute at family home in Marengo. His father was L. L, (Woody) Jenner, one-time Crawford county Repube . lican chairman. the new gove college in Danville and in Northwood boys’. school at . | the next elets Lake Placid, N. Y., he knew the score. By the time he Many people, used to hearing : ; either in finde got into freshman law at Indiana university he vibrations and needle noises yh gislation . or 18 decided to sit in for a hand or two himself and was up with their clarinets and A elected frasifent of 1A Heshunsst 1a elias, Phicties, get. upset, They say, - ] : greatly to me that the roe oy Sh vie HS YUH Yor the Sue Junie tu HM Sues Scmetsing engineers have to| Employees of the Indianapolis Plant of Lane Bryant, Tne. last night honored the firm's founder, | of the national tax laws the come pathy with the Indiana, he was still an amateur but not a novice. He explain, “Sure it is. We worked like Mrs. Lane Bryant Malsin of New York (center) with a disiner at the Indianapolis Athletic club. Shown pany actually may profit by being Sat ecko WA Was 38 ‘whens be was elected atate senator for Orengs, i heck to cut out those extra nolses.”| With her are her son, Theodore Malsin (left), who is secretary of the corporation, and Roscoe C. | idle until the end of the year. ay iad led J Lawrence and Martin counties that year and served Wiliam EK Jenner” The electronic reproduce has a| VW harvorth. general manager here. SA repudiating the || IB the legislative sessions in 1985, ‘36, 37, 38, ‘® needle that rides the side of the AND ITS spokesmen say that ‘not started to § 0d ‘4. : _ inthe U. 8. senate. He got the job of filling out the groove, instead of the bottom. Re- D » . POST-WAR SPUR— ~ even without the strike of its upon Russia in He became minority floor leader in the special - unfinished term of the late Senator Frederick Van- [cording experts claim this cuts down esigne First Lane Bryant own production employees its di - session of 1836 and president pro-tem in 1941 when his Nuys, in fact led the party's ticket. gently oa both needle vibration idle party moved into the majority. . . ace noise, . - ke bli J) ane te 0 pe Slightly Hesitant [Mh are ce wen oe] Dress in N.Y. 38 Years Ago » » against these |} pper Lress a MR. JENNER'S future in politics, though accepted | Amount of vertical, bounce in the : against him in BEFORE he went into the army in 1942, Bill was by many fellow Republicans as a foregone conclusion, | Reedle. but the engineers won't talk| When Lena Bryant wrote her and since the death of Mr. Malsin ite re French press, known as the “personality plus” type of politico, is a matter of some uncertainty with Bill himself | Much about this. It's top secret. first check on a $300 bank account,|in 1923, her sons have run the busi- °o” ® strike two weeks and four days n the army, he dapper dress and all the rest that goes with that He's not ready to quit or anything like that, but he Catches Lost Tones all borrowed, 45 years ago, she|ness. Her chief pride and thrill is Prices infed a5. 0. M. had produced less than days when the deseription. Today, aftér his time in service and a has a family to think of. Eh “We're trying to bring out as|80t excited gnd signed her name in those sons, three of them, and : of the 6000 passenger cars that he went busy post-service period which has never allowed He married Janet Cuthill of Bedford who, by the much of the sound of the musical] ene Bryant” Today a great|ner daughter. WASHINGTON, Dec.. 8.—Admin- expected fo put into dealers’ it the orders of 5 him time to “readjust,” he's’s little older and a little way, is a native of Scotland, in 1933. They have|instruments as possible,” one engi- of 33 stores doing &| Though she is a vice president|istration officials are talking over hands hr Dec, L All forecasts nunist party. quieter. Bill's still the type who will tear his vocal a youngster, William E. Jenner, who is now 4 years|neer explained, “while at the same|$33:000,000-a-year business bearsianq 4 member of the board of di-|the advisability of rolling back in- es suspended on future ign, Communist cords to pieces to hammer home a speech, though, and old and whose future is & matter of great concern to|time we're cutting down as much 5 rectobs, she insists she is no longer| fisted real estate prices. Deduction st Choveists, Ost ssue by coupling he preserves the youthful outlook which he hopes his dad. This, plus the fact that Mrs. Jenner does not|as possible on all extra noise.” Last night department heads and | active. An official connected with ane of | iL he Fentiag, Buicks and 0 great French- qulaifies him as a entirely share her husband's enthusiasm for politics,| Its inventors claim that the elec- of the Indianapolis plant| “My ides of someone who is ac-|the reconversion agencies said today 0 organize and He had to resign the state senate in order to makes him hesitate when it comes to announcing|tromic reproducer catches many|0f Lane Bryant, Inc, nation-wide|tive in business is someones who|that & decision on the proposed] It can be placed on the deads enter the army on a direct commission; attended political plans. tones, both at high and low volume creators of fashionable apparel for|works at it” she said. “I don't|Measure may be made over the| certain list that the strike will officers’ school at Miami, Fla, and joined the alr Although the younger Jenner's name is William E.|levels, which were lost entirely by|Stout women, gave a dinner in work, so I'm not active.” week-end. | Dot end before the middle of fore for ground duty as a first lieutenant. He served like his father's, he's not a “junior” Bill's “E”|the normal prewar radio phono-|honor of the litle grey-haired| But, active or not, she still takes| If adopted it would constitute part| Next week. Negotiations are off hat Thorez went . - for a time in England and was returned to the U. 8. stands for Ezra (he calls it “Esry”) and he doesn't/graph., ° i woman who founded the firm. a lively interest at 65 in the growth|0f 8 Program being presented to| until Monday, the spokesmen for er the fall of with an eye ailment which led to his discharge in like it. - Most of the pre-war a Mrs. Lane Bryant Malsin, how-|and success of her firm. Her visit|President Truman to deal with the| the corporation say they won't go that it was not October, 1944. : . © “When young Bill was born,” Mr. Jenner says, “I |priced models operate on a 5000 to] ever, does not call her story, which [to Indianapolis marks the fourth|8cute housing shortage and to ar-| beyond the approximate 10 ent to Moscow, While still in service he was “drafted” back into thought of naming him William Esra after me. But|6000 cycle band. The new electronic|Degan when she came to America as|anniversary of the Indianapolis|™®st the inflationary. trend in the Sell. Files they have oft

he said, he was ; politics when the party conferred on his attractive then when I saw how cute and defenseless he was I|reproducer’s range is much ter|® 16-year-old immigrant from Rus-|plant, headquarters for mail. [Te8] estate market. the ps the Communist fk Wife, as his proxy, the nomination for the short term just didn’t bave the heart'to do it.” - than that, but cautious grea sia, & success story. ving vi Boning Post-wir building is going ahead| hold out-for the 30 per __ Founded in 1907 é : ; :

immediate ob AZ OY in eter TT kai pie 1 weal SALVATION ARMY TO |-ammiirssion: vouid pie oe tro] oor mo woe wes | Atom Safety By William Yarbrough move. se um vu wf ded tn i since w TELL POST-WAR PL ro is Of, ahr satsis| THE OBVIOUS compromie

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j 88 PIOCHicA] maternity garment cities rose to $263,000,000 in October,| cent, and that is what it probably nthe Com : OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Dec. 8—Rabbits, rats, mice and This corps set up laboratories to study effects of [an expensive disc on the ,|in 1907, she founded a business. But| The Salvation Army's post-war|gy e304 the Sep r| will be. Bus 5 eyond their de- [Jl dogs helped guard the lives of the human beings all types of radiation on animals. ou’re not really getting full re Sant ee Tie ip | indianapolis program. will be pre. | total. say when, : ay the mandate produced the atomic bombs. : The corps determined the amount of radiation|fePtion. one expert . ca) Saige. | big busi-| chied 10 300 business and profes- The President told newsmen yes- Effects on the individual are ] While stomics workers were experimenting and act oo diaties mooit ne: Then 4 figured: how) Rut it sounds so good: that you(sredit. * sional men and clergymen at a|!erday that some sort of controll - beginning to appear among the term plans cer- | producing they were exposed to injury or death. This us 3 1a 0 wo Tadure 4 human bes. small] Paul L. Chamberlain, a General it was he who conceived the idea [luncheon at 12:15 p. m. Monday-tn{ ver Tea) etale prices Ja necestaty strikers. Picket. lines are thorough-going peril lurked in exposure to X-rays and in radiation gnimals close by the people who wese experimenting] Electric official, explained that the building the little lingerie shop|the Columbia club. 10 aid ihe stoars Inst a14 20 violence In reported stem. However, involved in production of plutonium. and manufacturing in laboratories and plants. The|®lectronic reproduction system “does(in New York into the fabulous| Pans to raise funds for construct. | “yi. 0 litte arrangements! applicatin Sector. bub hundred Seutanied KX Many workers protested that they were only 100 health and well-being of these animals “on the spot”|10t depend on a ‘single advanced | enterprise based on servics to any) UE & Be¥ cen'ehl PUIG Sid Sale| yro being worked out for the restor-| recorded in Detroit, from families atch and J willing to risk these dangers as a service to their served to measure the health and well-being of human |d€vice, but represents a general im-| woman “hard to fit. here will be discussed. John H. Al.| Son of priorities on bullding ma-| of strikers . | "country. But Manhattan project's top men deployed beings around them, provement of all details of the To her the story of Lane Bryant," soy icago; territorial commis. |'erials to channel a greater portion] ghe sited Automobile 5000 individuals to establish safeguards. ; Warning Sidnal system from pickup head to the/Inc. iss “sentimental story.” Her) to B' “HEREC TE ls | into residential construction, a work. In the precautionary front line were small animals, '’ TING Sig loudspeaker.” first venture into business, she says, (pth 71, 08 SERLOR Army, Meanwhile it was learned that] of relies bo mnce iis own iysiem It worked like this: THE HUMAN BEINGS, meanwhile, were constant-| Most observers believe that the(was to provide money to care for| “william H. Trimble will preside, [steps sre being taken 0 force the| mee wr cer CBoHeY tases, bub Workers on a certain assignment would realize ly under medical scrutiny, They received periodic|electronic reproducer, or something her first child, Raphael, who nOw| Guests will include Governor Gates, (army and navy to disgorge large of stril Offered a general system they were in danger. Imperceptible, mysterious forces Physical examinations. es similar to it, will be installed in|is president of the chain. Mayor Tyndall, Col. Elmer F. stocks .of lumber which they are r-hameiia. around them were threatening them with possible Those exposed to possible excesses of radiation|most new radio-phonographs with-| She succeeded in that, and in Straub, Henry F. Schricker, Louls|not using and have not yet de- Under Michigan Jaw strikers are distiguration, paralysis or death. nT wore badges of sensitive film which detérmined the|in the riext few years. raising three other children as well,| Bornstein and Clarence Sweeney, | clared surplus. not entitled to benefits of the ue Under the strain, some persons would grow taut. amount of exposure they. received. Dust samples ; . . Sor pment eOmpetistion sytem ry were analyzed. 3 ’ % . “ receive welfare . : Cd ne

THEN A RABBIT, rat, mouse or dog would be film badges. If the meters indicated exposure above placed among them where they worked. A medical the director would say: "Some workers wore film meters as finger rings.

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i : : : 5 - “It fant hurting this animal. It cant hurt you” Fingerprints of all employees were watched. Any | 1P, CHRISTMAS trees are It worked. gh : change in finger impression signaled prompt investi-| ro +o \™ bloom along Detroit's shopping Manhattan project's medical section reports the gation and new precautions. : Svenues, and the papers herald the manufacture of the atomic bomb caused no injury or Contaminated clothing received special washing. ; : il General Motors offer to its death.” One device was a continuously recording “alarm| This Is the 23d of 42 install. | In rear of the armored columns, [in April. It was at the outskirts of (Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, broke ployees. of more than a §1.& day Stafford L. Warren and Lt. Col. Hymer L. passed & tolerance level. : Gen. Marshall's report on the win- | wick fell to 9th army infantry. Prom their Weser crossings the and reached the Baltic on May 3.| CiPline keeps the great majority florg 1 , h | ning of world war 11. | Bypassing Leipsig and strong re- |British struck northward This action established contact| 'D line for the greater benefits Sng oe «5» sistance in the Hars Forest, the Ist|Hamburg, reaching the Elba southe|with Soviet forces at Wismar and| ‘Ha% have been held out to them Science B David Dietz "THE. entrance of the 15th army drove eastward to the Mulde east of the city... 3 cut off the Danish peninsula, by Walter Reuther, U, A. W. vice C Dy ( army, under command of | valley south of Dessau. The Canadians forced the Ijssel| Purthér resistance on this front Jlesident In chargs of the Gensral . ; : os Lt. LT. Gérow. into 2m. river and pressed on through the was hopeless. department, os, TWO NEW “trans-uranic” elements, a new isotope The amount of plutonium present in pitchblende Gen. . ’ '|- WHILE these extensive operations | Dutch towns, liberating the remain-| On May 5, the German comof neptunium, and the existence of natural pluto- is one part in 100,000,000,000,000. - In other words, if [the line of the 12th army continued, the battle progressed |ing sections of eastern and northern |mander surrendered all forces in We, the W. nium, are the first announcements of post-war discov- plutonium had to be obtained by separating it from group on March 80 gave more |28®inst the trapped Germans in the | Holland. ; northwest Germany, Holland and . ; eries in the field of atomic energy. ) pitchblende in the same fashion that Plerre and Marle |, 4 of : uhr. on» * All have been made by Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, Uni- Curie separated radium from pitchblende, it would om action to the I1st| With the 15th army holding the| FAR to the south, the 3d army— oo" e.» You G. |. Wives versity of California professor of ©“ take approxmiately $,000,000,000 tons of pitch and 9th armies. west face of the pocket. along the after capturing Muhlhausen, Goths,| ALONG the Danube, the 3d army LL ie chemistry, working at the metal- wi to yield one ounce of plutonium. : It ‘enabled them to increase the| Rhine, and armor and infantry of and Erfurt—crossed the Saale river [continued the advance into Aus- Are Going fo : lurgical laboratory of the Univer- The new isotope of neptunium is neptunium 237.|weight of the offensive into Ger-|!he 9th and 1st armies driving injand turned southeast toward thel .. oo o.oo oo © Wo h stress on ors sity of Chicago, the center where The nymber means that there is a total of 237 pro- h from the north, east, and south, mountains of Oszechoslovakia- and Nest dey Tien Ba 0 y 8. Get Bl. med etailed report of so much of the work .on the tons and neutrons in the nucleus. This number 1s| Ninth army tanks immediately|the formidable enemy forces were the Danube valley. i Costhonoval eh 10 auf Jovces pig : | Jr ; atomic bomb was done. known. technically as the “mass number.” broke out of the area north of the cfushed in just 18 days. This advance was designed to es-| 0 JECERIVEER, COR. FEES TEA By RUTH MILLETT sweep them intd As is well known the atomic ; The nature of & chemical element is determined | Ruhr and swept eastward in a pow-| More than 300,000 prisoners were tablish firm contact with the Soviet |." oC Te ou A 3 ngressional elece bomb makes use of either ura- by the positive charge on the nucleus which is due 10 | erful thrust toward Munster. taken in this unique victory, won| forces in Austria and to’ preverit any| Lo8 EL BAA CRONE 00 10 THE war is quer, wives, and all d a triumphant . nium 235 or plutonium. Dr, Sea- the number of protons in the nucleus. This | On April 1 the enveloping col-|f®r behind our forward positions and | effective reorganization of the ene-|) 1" ot Berchtesgaden 8 strong-| that praise. you got for quietly years afterward. borg was one of the co-discoverers technically the “atomic number.” In the case Of |umns of these armies made contact|"IUArelY astride our lines of com-|my remnants in mountainous re-|"p oT TU EEE EE vpieiging ein the S ; of * plutonium. Previously the neptunium it is 93. : west of Paderborn, cutting off the|Mubication. - gions to the south. Pxveg Ble hn ig Money's Buttle the war ssidue of the oid table of chemical elements stopped It will be seen at once that the number of neutrons | Rubr and a large ares to the south.| soon 1eitaie and On the right, the Tth army en-\grenner pass to. establish contact the ” mmittee, just ab with ‘Wo. 93 which is’ uranium. in the nucleus can be calculated by subtracting the| This was the largest pocket of en-| TOO A ier ri [countered bitter resistance in Nuer- | ith the Sth army at Vipiteno, - i$ ast. cently has been Two new chemical elements, : atomic number from the mass number, velopment in the history of war-| Lr ans were in American | berg, but quickly captured the city 3 ] oa ude of some 39 known as ‘“trans-uranic® elements were created In ue on ovo Fa fare. a a I rion 100d |and then swung south into the Ba=| covey 08 8 viera rly ers toward. the the atomic bomb project, namely N ith Cyclotron .. ... om the une OF the Kive-Mulde, We yurian plain, DE lis landing un the Riviera, and louie : and No. 94 or plutonium. en ~~ THE PREVIOUSLY known fieptunium was neptus ELEMENTS of 18 German divi. | SPeeed FRTE SEC ta »- "oo. erage of more than three miles = pect more crite 8 by 4 hws Dr, Seaborg now announces that minute amounts nium ~ : sions from the Ist parachute, 5th To establish contact with our al-| ON MAY 1 the 3d army was ad-|,.. ening what had been the most feism than - e elder G, O. of plutonium were found in pitchblende, the ore from The yet unnamed new elements, No. 98 and 96, and 15th armies were en-|,... oon tne eastern front, 1st army |Y2NCiNE into Csechosiovakis on 8|(ormideble army in the world. praise. You up here or elses which uranium and radium are both extracted. were created Dr. his in this skillful maneuver rant, of arg by Seaborg and colleagues, Drs. ulde to At noon on May 6 army group not a heroine 3 The amounts of the trans-uranic element present, R. A. James, L. O. Morgan and Albert Ghioroso, Leaving strong forces to contain “G,” comprising all German forces any more. = however, is so small never have been They were found by bombarding uranium 338 and reduce this giant encirclement, in Austria, swrendered uncondis A

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11 months. after the landing in Normandy. :

” » . ede THE POWERFUL wehrmacht had| because of hasty and mass disintegrated under the combined |- ployment. allied blows, and the swift advances And who's to blame? The mille into the mountains of Austria and| tary leaders? The lawmakers in " |Bohemia had prevented the estab-| Washington? The men in uni {lishment of an inner fortress, form? :

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on May 7, 1945, all land, sea, and] man—that you are air forces of the Reich. ,

| (NEXT: The Road to China)

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renewed their negotiations. ’ representatives of some large business could yy ii But far nobody has not be found on his calendar of visitors, a ome ot now, a period Will Entertai inte the reasom for thess y._ 1 we do not hold our rent and price ceilings, We|y, which the lines i nrerrain ean Jook forward to a repetition of conditions J he Sn your map will santly called “bellyaching” hook 4 #8 (heyino, advance as rapidly as they did Vet 'G Could be you are human were in the sesly 3003, it at) poem hard 10iduring the past several wesks be- : ererans roup to have your loneliness heightened service. F — : 3 Soca ath their Sly Sates Ye Tu yauss 0 Sit te Officers of Maj. Harold C. Megrew| DY the thousands of servicemen

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sw » a” i , has been making efnl In living costs, bo id out of the area but Jaan 1 hiuk we may be it if this fact, once they|,y lo the suns blic, and that includes. Will set themselves to work to find|warq, and his lack of mobility with- | labor, : the cost of manufacture of their! the pocket, both make it very difreally impairing the quality. |ficult for him to launch a really ! a, Ges “1 an nt itl]. ak SORASens that 2a oats do by Armored ga of 1. 3 mies MSE Jano 30 to 20 stn

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