Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1946 — Page 5
SHOT IN
KILLINGS
3° (U. P.).~Gerleps, one of the
in the Malmedy itted in a staterosecution today irst shot in the prisoners of war ' the Bulge. * ie fired on the rs with his pistol ed orders from off the Ameri-
L. at one of the him fall over,” lis, chief prose eps’ statement.
ROUTED ING WALL
y of home seek1 today by five police from an at 410-412 E. er a brick side
'00ms were exe n yesterday aftinjured.
I PP R—
be LN
THURSDAY, MAY 23;
Boys Play Catch —W ith Grenade
CHICAGO, May 28 (U. P.).~ John Suzuki interrupted a game of catch behind his tavern be cause the youngsters were shouting to loudly,
They tossed the ball into a garbage can and trooped ‘off. Suzuki thought the ball looked odd when he fished it from the garbage, He found # was a hand grenade, fully loaded.
WTR
ROGERS’ Home-Beautiful Fioor
108 ARMY CAPTAIN HELD IN WOMAN'S DEATH
~ FRANKFURT, May 23 (U, P.).— The ‘provost marshal revealed today, he was holding Capt. John D. Becher, 28, Darby, Pa. for formal investigation in the mysterious death of pretty Gertrude - Knapp, war department efployee who was found naked, dying and bleeding on the steps of an officers’ apartment building last Sunday. Becher was being held, the provost marshal said, despite the -fact that “Miss Knapp died of head inJuries and her death was probably accidental.” . He was identified as the “occupant of the apartment where it was believed the aceident took place.”
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RUSSIA BUYING SCIENTIFIC DATA
U. S. Wartime Secrecy * Restrictions -Eased. (Continued From Page One)
foreign "government efforts to obtain wartime scientific data. One object of the inquiry, Senator Eastland said, is to determine whether the army and navy are removing secrecy restrictions too rapidly. Patent office and publications board officials say the information they are releasing has been thoroughly screened and is available to anyone at a moderate cost. Many governments other than Russia are among their customers. The Russian purchasing commis(sion paid the publications board | $1356 for photostatic copies of about hiv documents. The comntissiony | ordered copies of all documents listed in one issue of the board's catalog. This represented about onesixth of the material released to date.
Amtorg Doing Buying The remainder of the Russian purchases have been made through Amtorg Trading Corp. which chose the material selectively from various issues of the catalog. Board officials sald Amtorg's purchases were about two-thirds of those made by the purchasing commission. The publications board was created by President Trumen in June, 1945, chiefly to give American manufacturers access to non-secret technical data compiled sources in this country. Later the order was extended to cover information seized from enemy countries. More than 22,000 reports have been removed from secrecy restrictions and more than 200,000 copies have been sold. Purchases are now running at the rate of 5000 a week | The documents are available in photostat or microfilm form at prices ranging from $1 to $77 for the former and 50 cents to $30 for the latter, depending on size. Available to Anyone Amtorg Corp. has purchased both photostats and microfilm. The documents are available at library depositories for anyone to examine without charge. ‘While no formal reciprocal agreement exists between this country and Russia on scientific information, publications officials say that in a few cases American missions have been given access to a limited amount of such data. Russian purchases of American patents have been made both by the purchasing commission and Amtorg. The 175,000 copies purchased to date, officials said, have been chiefly in the chemical, plastics and synthetics fields. No Exchange Since 1917
No exchange of patents has heen in existence with Russia since 1917 but copies of non-secret U. 8S. patents can be purchased by anyone for 10 cents each. The government, incidentally, lost about $17,500 in filling the Russian orders since the dime-per-copy price covers only about half of the print~
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(Continued From Page One)
war II. The recently discharged army air force major flew a B-29 in the «Pacific and was one of the heroes who bombed Tokyo. He was a veteran of 40 ferry missions over the China “hump.” First officer of the flight was “Veteran William Lukes, ; Gets In Some Study As he waved “goodby” to the ground crew, Bill settled back to finish his breakfast and then “brush up” on spelling in a new book, “20,000 Words,” he has been studying for several days to prime himself for the competition against more than a score of the nation's best grade school spellers in the national contest. Mr. Wright will send reports of the champion’s activities in the capital during the four days of entertainment and competition. In his traveling bag Bill had packed away the red sport shirt he wore when he won the Indian{apolis championship ‘title at Caleb Mills hall May 3. “I'm” going to wear that shirt in the Washington contest,” Bill said. “I wore it_in the contest at my school, then in the Washington township finals, and in the semi-finals and grand finals at Caleb Mills hall , , . it's my good luck shirt.” With his eyes sparkling, he checked the plane's takeoff time by the 17-jewel gold“watch he received
oe INDIANAPOLIS roves . Spelling Champ, Rabbit's Foot And All, Greeted by Capehart
{a $500 victory bond,
for winning the Indianapolis title, a gift of the Indianapolis Times, If Bill should win the national championship title he would receive $125 in cash and $75 for spending money on a trip he would make to New York City to see the sights for two days. The least he can win in the Washington finals is $40. An omen of “good luck” accompanied this city's candidate for national honors. The last digit in the number of his airplane ticket was “" . + the identification number! he wore in the grand finals here and which he says has always been his lucky number,
AMBASSADOR ON WAY
LONDON, May 23 (U. P.) —Lord Inverchapel, new British ambassador to the United States, will leave for his new post on the Queen Mary today.
Organizations
The Busy Bee club will sponsor a card arty at 8:30 p. m. today at 2217 BE Michgan st,
Queen Esther chapter 3, O. EB 8, will sponsor a card party at 1:30 Pp. m. May 20 in Ayres’ suditorium, Proceeds will go
to the Red Cross.
The Mooseheart alumni committee of the Women of the Moose will sponsor a benefit card party at 7:30 p. m, tomorrow at the Food Craft shop. Mrs. Margaret Davis is chairman of the com-
MRS. DORA F. SONN DIES IN NEW ORLEANS
Mrs. Dora Fried Sonn, mother o Mrs. Mabel. Blogk, formerly of Indianapolis, died Monday at New Orleans. She had lived with Mrs, Block at Miami Beach, Fla, for 10 years, and was a member of the Christian Science church there. Survivors besides Mrs. Block ‘are’ a grandson, H. C. Block Jr.; two, granddaughters, Mrs. Jack W, Zim-| mer and Mrs. John H. Wolf, all of
BROKEN LENSES REPLACED BRING IN THE PIECES
DR. JOS. E. KERNEL
TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG.
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