Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1946 — Page 7

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PIKE ! RE-OPENS \pril 12th

TUESDAY, MARCH 2%,

TEACHERS HERE

Look to City's Following. Example of State.

HOPE FOR RAISE;

Indianapolis teachers were hop- | ing today that the school board will follow the example set yesterday by | the state and raisé teachers’ wages in the new school budget. Recognizing the fact that Hoosier teachers are underpaid, the state yesterday announced that it will pay 100 per cent of minimum teachers’ salaries. Previously it had carried 95 per cent of the cost of its budget. At a regularly scheduled séhool board meeting at 7:30 p. m. tonight, the Federation of Indianapolis Public 8chool Teachers will recommend that the annual raise as provided by schedules be appropriated, teach= ers be placed on the present 22step schedule and salaries be increased from $100 to $150 annually. They Are Jubilant “We are jubilant over the state's decision and hope that this move will prompt the board to augment salaries in the new. budget,” J. Clayton Hughes, executive secretary of the federation, said. Asserting that the state proposal was a “break for all Hoosier teachers,” he hoped that the board will give careful consideration to the federation’s proposal, “This is a matter of great concern to the whole community,” he averred. “Unless satisfactory adJustments are made, the teaching profession will lose potential instructors now training in colleges.” Convineed of Underpay Although expressing happiness over the state’s move, Virgil Stinebaugh, superintendent of schools, refused to comment on possible teachers’ salary increases until the board initiated action. Earlier, Harry L. Gause and Ed-

school board, stated that they were convinced that teachers were under-

plauded any move to raise teachers’

gar A. Perkins Sr., members of the

1946

ii

eT

. BILL MAULDIN

_ BATTON. | DURS KIN

TY ————

“Th’ union was pleased with that

full-page ad about Amalgamated Steel. Now Amalgamated wants us to do one about th’ union.”

DISMAY AWAITS BRIDES IN JAPAN

New “Conditions May Shock Servicemen’s Wives.

By SIDNEY B. WHIPPLE: Seripps-Howard Staft Writer TOKYO, March 26.—No one can furnish any statistics about the number of wives of scwvicemen and officers who will, sometime between now and the end of the year, arrive in this country. But it is safe to say there will be. thousands of them. A recent order by Gen. MacArthur's headquarters directing the Japanese government to produce materials for the construction of at least 20,000 family housing units, plus hurried surveys of housing in southern Japan, indicate the ex-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

(CToYe]0) MANNERS

| g000 MANNERS ™ [Dawakis MEAN Les

floor.

other.

pected scope of the American immigration. I can't foresee how young American wives are going to like Japan. They will find it “quaint” and “interesting” at first, but the quaint-

vironment that is so different from our own-in standards of cleanli-| ness and sanitation, of living hab- | its and manners and, ‘particularly, | of aromas. | May Find It Primitive |

If the more {fortunate among them are assigned homes in the houses planned by the U. 8. complete with plumbing, electricity, |

paid. The Indianapolis Council of Par-ent-Teacher Association also ap-

wages in the city. The National Education association has shown that living salary adjustments for teachers throughout the nation averaged 18 per cent less than the general cost of living. A Times survey last week disclosed that any increase in teachers’ pay would raise the 1947 municipal tax rate approximately seven cents.

dom,

Even Sing Sing

Feels Shortage

OSSINING, N, Y, March 26 (U. P.).~—Things are tough over. It used to be that when a cone vict had served his term and was leaving Singi Sing, the prison would give him a white shirt. But the shirt shortage now has made it necessary for the men to wear a colored shirt as they pass through the gates. to freeWarden William Snyder sald yesterday.

all

and even electric stoves and heat- | ers, they may be happy. If, how- | ever, they are assigned a pretty] but primitive Japanese habitation, they are in for some disillusion- | ment, The usual Japanese house is nei- | ther proof against the -heat of the| summer sun nor of the biting winds | of winter. Paper doors and windows | afford only a mild shield* against | the elements, The average kitchen equipment, | the American bride will find, con- | sists of an electric hot-plate (in better homes) and one or two “hibachis,” an earthen pot which] burns charcoal whenever charcoal | is available, And as for the elec-!

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tricity, it comes on and goes off at | the apparent whim of somebody in the power station, leaving many a fried egg to turn cold in the middle of the cooking.

Disgusting Gas

The hibachi, furthermore, is not | only malodorous when it is fired up, but it gives off a disturbing gas | that often leaves the cook flpored | in a faint if she forgets to fan Ue gas out the window. The American wife's food. probably will be good because it will come | from army stores and there is a variety and freshness &bout all of the products now arriving from the | United States. But she needn't ex-| pect much from the Japanese food. | Pruits in Japan don't have the fla- | vor of American fruits. There is an imitation tangerine, called “mikan” which looks like a diminutive orange and tastes as if

MacARTHUR HAS COLD TOKYO, March 26 (U. P.).—Gen. Douglas MacArthur remained at his

home in the U. 8. embassy for the of the naval discharge center here:

third straight day today sufferin ness may dissolve quickly in an en-| Wh ws cold y y 5

Prank Brings Police on Run

CHEYENNE, Wyo, March 26 (U, P.).~Detective Fred Schmok« er and Policeman Fred Sinclair thought they had a murder on their hands. Sent—to investigate a disturb- || ance in an apartment building, they paused in the hallway and heard a man plead: “Don't shoot me with that gun.” Schmoker and Sinclair debated their next move. “Be careful with that knife,” they heard the man say. A woman suddenlv opened the door and the two officers saw a man lying on his back on the

Standing above him was a small boy with a toy gun in one hand and a rubber knife in the

YOU MEAN ME?

NORMAN, Okla, March 26 (U. P).—Traffic safety warning | the Separator,

“The car to watch is the car | behind the one in front of you.”

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apples and pears are equally flavorless. And furthermore, our authorities do not. like to have us eat| either the fruit or vegetables we find here. Dangerous from health | standpoint.

MALLORY'S SUES FOR DIES WORTH $20,000

VALPARAISO, Ind, March 26] (U, P.).—A suit by an Indianapolis | firm to reclaim $20,000 worth of | dies was on file in Porter circuit court today against the local plant] of the Continental Diamond Fibre Co. | Officials of the P. R. Mallory Co. of Indianapolis said the dies belonged to their firm. The local Continental plant has been rlosed since Nov. 15 when its 400 union employes walked out because of wage difficulties. i I

FUNERAL PLANNED FOR AGED SLEUTH

LAFAYETTE, Ind., March 26 (U.| P.).—Funeral services were ar-| ranged today for the operator of | private detective agencies in three Hoosier cities. The rites were scheduled for WilHam W. Weinhardt, 83, who formed detective agencies in Indianapolis, Pt. Wayne and Lafayettes A former Tippecanoe county sheriff, he was the first state policeman to be assigned to duty in the Tippecanoe county area.

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