Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1946 — Page 7
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ntinued to hit City starting ed a brace of , seventh and
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rga Sisti 2, Shupe se hits—Bergamo 2, sti Stolen bases— fice—Nelson. Double Drews to Roberge to Bisti. Left on Columbus 9. Bases e 4, McLeland 1, eid 1. Strikeouts— 1d 2, Woods 7, Reid ? in 9 innings, Mcin 7, Logan 3 in 2, ll—~Brady. Winning pitcher—McLeland, Mullen, Time—2:34,
8s 65 t Club
16th hole yester= rles Harter, club qualing the Hillcord of 64. pars and eight , seven under par A. champion, Bob 1e course record, er's round were Raleigh Bennetg
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J J EARLE W.. PUGHE won't exert his influence
of the Chevrolet commercial body plant xious to cultivate friends in Indianapolis. e's been approached by new-car ssekers “from da to Mexico, from the Atlantic to the Pacific,” for one and all he has a stock reply: “Distrition of new Chevrolets is based on a mathematical irmula determined in Detroit.” . . . Mr; Pughe him-
self drives a 1942 Cheyvy (he also owns a 1936 model)
declining to» take advantage of his envious position as a General Motors executive. . . . Personrbl: and pole, he's a middle-aged gent with grey-streaked hair but without a middle-aged girth, having tailored his physique with y.ars of swimming, his favorite relaxation. . . . However, he insists, “I'm strictly a downhill, country swiminer. I refuse to work hard in the water.” . . , His friends say he works hard enough out of water, a theory supported by th- fact that he advanced himself from a “flunky” job with G-M in Detroit, to a'key post in its vast automotive empire, . , , Coming here from Buffalo, Mr. Pughe (pronounced Pew) was given a noisy welcome. . Outside his window steam drills throb and sledge hammers pound as workmen expand the Chevrolet plant around his unpretentious office. . . . Mr. Pughe will remain in the middle of this clamorrus maelstrom,until the first of next year, by which time the new factory will have literally been constructed over him and a new office will be ready on an ad- . . Unconc rned by the racket, the
Earle W. Pughe ... No, he has no new Chevvys, he has no new Chevvys today.
A-Bomb Myths
WASHINGTON, June 29.—1It is tought to have to disappoint all the disaster wishers, but the atomic bomb explosion at Bikini won't blow up the world, put a fresh, flaming nova in the heavens, or even give rise to a new and ferocious race of insects. The greatest risk outside the immediate vicinity will be what other peoples of the world think about it. Scientists don’t think that throwing atomic bombs in their faces is a good way to make friends and influence Russians. As to this danger of bjowing up the earth into a brahd new nova, we have it on the authority of Dr. Dean B. McLaughlin of the University of Michigan observatory that the giganiic outbursts originate in the stars themselves and not in their satellites. « ° And our sun is not even the: kind of star in which 8 nova or “new star” explosion occurs, Novae, we are assured, are not planets whose physicists have carried nuclae research just a little too far.
Earth Will Not Be Split EQUALLY positive are physicists who tell us there is no real chance of a chain-reaction being started that would set the atoms of the ocean or the earth's crust to splitting and spitting out energy. Actually breaking up the two most abundant elements, oxygen and silicon, would absorb and not release energy. Atomic scientists are much more concerned over the difficulties in making uranium and plutonium fission explosively in the bomb than over chain reaction accigents. Touching off the world with an atomic bomb is
Aviation
HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS of federal dollars soon will be available to be matched by other millions from cities and states for our national airport program. It wouldbe a mighty healthy, to say nothing of economical, idea for local authorities fo do some hard thinking about airports. An airport is nothing more or less than a refueling and servicing point at the intersection of aerial highways. Thinking of an airport as a facility for landing and taking off is the old conception, but it doesn’t fit the modern picture. In the setup to come, an airport will become a little community in itself with stores, restaurants, hotels, aircraft sales agencies, repair and overhaul facilities. This grouping of essential facilities must be tied into the local business by adequate transportation. The best minds in aviation estimate that within a few years there will be approximately 20,000,000 persons traveling to and from airports daily. Half of this number will re transportation, A great percentage will be workmer“employed at the air:
ports.
16,000 Landings in May ONE GREAT AIRPORT today reports that its mail amounts to 1,500,000 pounds a month, with freight and air express poundage increasing at prodigious rates. At the Washington National airport, for Instance, during May of this year, there were 16,000 landings and take-offs. All this stresses the need for long-range planning. There was a time a few years ago when it was difficult to get a taxi to an airport. The rates were
My Day
HYDE PARK, Friday.—I was very -much interested the other day to receive an article sent to me from Pageant magazine on a New Jersey community which has changed its name from Jersey Homesteads to Roosevelt. This is one of the homesteads started in the days of the depression, and it has had a hard and discouraging career. A small group of New York garment workers orig{nally moved out there from the slum areas of the city. Each contributed a small amount of money, and their plan was to run their own factory, live on small garden or farm plots, and have the stores municipally owned. It didn’t work, partly because the experience was not there to run this type of community. : Today things are privately owned and run, but I judge from this article that a spirit of co-operation still exists and the community is politically active. They have a high rate of actual voters in elections. The borough council meetings are open to the public, and public issues are discussed there and at specially called, town meetings in which the citizens take part.
Arthurdale Project Praised
I WAS VERY GLAD to see this article because so often we are told these experiments of the depres-
sion years have produced nothing but lsd to the
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iside Indianapolis -
ou a nice, shiny 1946 car, even if he is new .
yo
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Hoosier Profiles
new manager observes: “I worry only when there isn’t any noise in this business.”
Former Physical Director A NATIVE New Yorker from Utica (he's “hiked all over upstate New York,” once was physical director in the Schenectady Y. M. C. A), his Indianapolis assignment isn't his first in the Midwest. . . . He likes the midlands ‘because there's plenty of room to swing a cat out here. I like space.” , . . After graduating from Rennselaer Polytechnic institute (where he was a cross-country runner), he served a short stretch with General Electric, then entered the automotive fleld via the White Motor Co. in Cleveland. . . . From there he proceeded \o Detroit, where he joined G-M in 1925, then hecame assistant superintendent of a G-M unit at St. Louis, then doubled back to Detroit as assistant paint engineer. . . « He emphatically denies responsibility for garish colors decorating G-M cars produced in the early 30's. . . , Later, he headed plants in Kansas City and Buffalo, where he bossed a vital G-M aircraft engineering plant during the war. . v . Usually active civically, he withdrew from “extra-curricular” affairs at that time and anchored himself to his wartime job, his friends recall. It was his second war role. . . , In world war I, he rose from a buck private to air corps captain, enlisting in the. air corps, “because it was up out of the mud.” . . . He learned to fly, but served chiefly as a ground officer and hasn't piloted a plane since 1925. . . . Although specializing in production engineering rather than research, he's equally at home behind a desk or in the factory, where he frequently roamed in Buffalo in an old suede jacket among the assembly line help. . . , Never a disciplinarian, he retains the same even, genteel manner whether consorting with a grease-splattered janitor or a starch. collared superior in the G-M high-command, acquaintances testify.
Father of Two Children
HIS DEVOTION to his family (still*ir Buffalo) seeps consistently through his conversation in recurring references to his wife, a daughter, Frances, now at Smith college, and a son, Earle W. Pughe Jr. . « . A moderate drinker, he never imbibes on Sunday.
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The Indianapolis
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SECOND SECTION
Out Shaking Hands With Nature, fais o oisus
. « « While reading or conferring (and doodling geometric designs on a yellow scratch pad) in his office, | he wears a half-pair of bifocals with the upper part! of the lenses sawed off, . . . “I don’t like to glance up through the top of my glasses, so I had this| special pair made,” he explains almost apologetically. . . . An omniverous reader, preferring books to movies (he hasn't seen one in six years), he nevertheless shuns “intellectual” repartee. . . . He likes history and biography because “I'm interested in how all those big men got that way.” . .. He also likes bridge, canoeing and trap-shooting (“Be sure and spell trapshooting with a T"). Of his labor policy here, he remarks: “We'll treat everybody fair. That's rbout all you can say and anything else would simply be more words to that effect.” . . . When Chevrolet's expansion program is complete, Mr. Pughe will be among the city's top half-dozen employers, supervising 2500 workers. (By Sherley Uhl) .
By Watson Davis |
like starting'a forest fire by striking a match on an iceberg at sea. Letting loose a radioactive gas attack is much more! likely and dangerous to those relatively close to| Bikini. Unfavorable winds or rain might spray spectators with atomic debris of the bomb. Then there is the Krakatoa fear. In August, 1883, that volcano exploded, put dust into the earth's atmosphere that reddened sunsets for three years, and may have influenced the weather. The three previous explosions weren't Krakateas. So why should Bikini be? Tidal Wave, Quake Unlikely THE RADIATION blast of an atomic bomb fis terrific, but the thousands of men near Bikini won't be sterilized or suffer other such dire injury. When and if they become fathers, no race of monsters is likely to arise because of the genetic effect of atomic radiation, Test animals and insects deliberately exposed to the radiation at close range many undergo changes, but any permanent effects produced will not be dangerous. Tidale waves, earthquakes and volcanoes are unlikely, particularly as the result of the first Bikini explosion in the air. The underwater explosion planned later might trigger a quake, roll up sizable waves or, less likely, weaken the ocean floor to give rise to volcanic action. But don’t count on it, because compared with nature’s forces in storms and earthquakes, the atomic bomb is a local phenomenon,
\ SATURDAY, JUNE 29, 1946 CAMERA CLOSEUP . . . By Dan McCormack =
One of 50 East Side youths “shaking hands” with nature at the
new Indianapolis Y. M. C. A. camp gingerly beckons “Abraham,” farm
in Decatur county, Nathan Negley mule of the old school. Both are
dubious of each other, The camp is near Greensburg on Flat Rock river,
Don Hudson writes a letter home in one of three
cottages where “Y” campers bunk. bought the hilly land for $16,000,
0s Fe Re
By Maj. Al Williams
high because the volume of business was low. As| soon as the business warranted, the taxi rates were reduced. So profitable has the business to and from airports become that big taxi concerns now pay thou- | sands of dollars for the exclusive concession to do this job. But we are approaching the limit of the | taxi. o {
Need Mass Facilities
SOME DAY soon we must have mass transportation facilities between the airport and the city. | Busses may bridge the gap for a while but the eventual solution will be the rail spurs. This is the string which will tie the airport to the city. On this point both rail and air lines executives are agreed that the helicopter will have a place in the tieup. But it will be a luxury service, and by no | stretch of the imagination the answer to mass transportation.
Exclamationis of surprise recently greeted the statement by one of aviation's foremost leaders that rail and highway facilities are as much a part of an airport as the runways. But a city wouldn’t think of building a public facility without providing adequate streets and roads, And," as soon as city fathers understand that high-speed highways and rail service to an airport are the missing link in our modern transportation chain, they will agree that these facilities really are integral parts of the airport itself.
Indianapolis yesterday signed a five-year contract with Air-Auto Service providing for. improved transportation facilities at Weir Cook airport.
By Eleanor Roosevelt taxpayers. The other day, for instance, I received a long letter from the minister at Arthurdale, W. Va, who runs the community church. It is an encouraging report on the success of the people in the community. Yet I had just read, rather sadly, a diatribe in some paper quoting the cost of the original experiment and stating the people had not liked the paternalism of government control, that the government had now sold the community and only recovered about 5 per cent of the original expenditure.
Long Run Cost Reduced
ALL THIS MAY BE true, even the part about the people not liking to be helped, and yet I can hardly belleve this was universal when I remember the conditions from which those people came. If at that time some kind of government help had not come, they and their children today might be costing the taxpayers far more than the loss on. that investment in the Arthurdale community. ° I cannot help believing that the people who how own those houses and live in those communities have healthier, happier children, and that these children have grown in the past 14 years to better citizenship
tight as he tags Donald Dicks wh aside. for 10-day periods this summer,
Action at home plate catches Bob Bidwell with his eyes clamped
The local “XY”
Top Democrats
By FRED W. PERKINS WASHINGTON, June 20.—Airy | talk and threats of a leftwing and {third political party are forecast | for tonight when the national eiti-
| zens political - action committee “graduates” about 500 men and women.
For three days they have received instruction here on how to make themselves more influential in public affairs. | There will be two principal speakers at the “commencement.” One is Senator Pepper (D. Fla.), who is regarded as the least conservative member of the senate. The other speaker is A. F. Whitney, president of the Brotherhood of : |Rallway Trainmen, who has parted ‘lyith the Truman administration ng.clegr indication of where ng.
» - » THE THIRD PARTY talk is not yet taken seriously by Democratic party chieftains. Their hope is that before the next presidential election the extreme “liberals” will .|see that the Republicans would benefit chiefly by a swing of labor [and assoclated groups from Mr, | Truman. ) | The leftish atmosphere of the
Construction of board walks is still under way in an artificial lake | “School of political techniques” has on the 100-acre site. East Side District Secretary John Turner gives |attracted the interest of the house
swimming instructions to Bobby Bidwell, Bart Gish and Billy Weliever. Unidentified workmen in background are interested,
Targek practice on a supervised range is daily occurrence at “XY” camp, first ever reserved exclusively for Indianapolis lads. Behind the sights are (left to right) Bennie |
Means, Don Henderson and Don Hodson.
R hb Yee
o
ile Batter David Klingeman steps
Some 200 boys from throughout the city will visit the camp
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Povey
committee on tivities, If this committee, as has been rumored, has an undercover representative in attendance, the main information he has picked up so far .is that this school has given an intensive course in earthy politics to people apparently determined to get out sthe votes for their brand of political thinking - » ” » ONE OF THE SPEAKERS in a session dealing with racial groups
un-American ac-
a
retary of the American Slavic congress. Mr. Perinsky expressed the opinion that “American reactionaries” are aiding the reactionaries of other countries, and further that “Soviet expansion in Europe is
people.” ‘ Nn He charged also that the congressional action aimed at denying re- {. food to European countries— eaning Russia—that do not accept i | the American idea of a free press | “is really a political club.” Fervent | applause greeted these statements. t = = =" are THE DOWN-TO-EARTH political tethnique taught ip this school was illustrated by Abraham Zeitz, in charge of fund raising for the N. O.P: A.C. Mr. Zeitz, telling how to organize dinners and other meetings, warned the. students not to allow chairmen to “become intoxicated with their own eloquence—because he knew of Jeages in which the oratory became % long and tiresome that “the big maney walked out before the pitch The “pitch” is the appeal for funds, 5 » s IN A SESSION on how to meet congressmen and influence them a young woman wanted to know how to convert legislators who already had taken unfavorable stands on pending proposals, Irving Richer, Washington representative of the C. I. O. United Autorfibbile Workers, illustrated the answer in this way:
“Y” Councilor Dan Langell teaches leather handicraft tech- 1 Two years ago, he said, Senators
niques to George Lane and Don Ehrgott.
Other facilities include a | Vandenberg
and Ferguson, both
huge mess hall supplied by natural gas from a well on the property |Michigan Republicans, told a delega~
and a quarry full of bass.
SE AM AN LOSES MISS TILLIE'S NOTEBOOK . . . By Hilda Wesson
PLEA IN CHINA You Get Just W
DEAR MISS TILLIE: Something's wrong with my son to go to summer school and actually is liking it. vacations were what I lived for—~AMAZED PARENT.
Court Upholds ‘Jail Term in Knifing Case.
SHANGHAI, June 29 (U. P).— The Kiangsu high court today upheld the two and a half year jail sentence imposed on Edward P.! Werda, 22, Alpena, Mich., merchant | sailor convicted in the Chinese! courts -of fatally knifing a sailor. Werda was the first American to be tried in the Chinese courts since the end of extraterritoriality. He! pleaded self-defense. His case attracted attention when congressional critics charged. the American consulate refused to give Werda legal assistance and claimed the U. 8. navy held Werda illegally
- air —— - —— and turned over statements he made! 'CLURE 10 HEAD | A ; : {2 to the Chinese prosecutors. M tom i Cc
Two unofficial observers from the| consulate were present when] Werda's appeal was heard. Werda is confined to a dirty cel block with four Russians and or German, Denied Food, He Says He claimed he was told by William M. Olive, U. 8S. vice-consul, before his first ‘trial that “your social and financial position” does not warrant consular intervention. Werda said he asked Mr, Olive for aid in getting food and was told “we have enough trouble buying food for our own people.” Werda demanded to know why, since a U, 8S. navy physician had testified that the fatal wound could not possibly have been inflicted by him, the consul did not protest the verdict. He also demanded to know why the consul allegedly collected incriminating evidence from the navy and gave it to the Chinese, Werda said his appeal was obtained through the efforts of a fellow seaman, James Cooney, Balti~ more, Md., whose father is a major in the U. 8. army in Tokyo. | ——— SULLIVAN PRINTER DIES SULLIVAN, Ind, June 29 (U. P.).|
liam H. Miles, 78, print shop fore-|
than they could have achieved if there had been no Jersey Homesteads and no Arthurdale, or the equivalent in various parts of our nation,
3 ma 3 ®
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teacher has undoubtedly developed some line of work that has inter-| ested him keenly. He is finding a|
|
chance in the summer school to go |
{ahead with'that interest.
| YOU'VE ALWAYS KNOWN | That good things come high, but| even though the bars were down | TODAY BILLY SAID: I wrote a letter to my teacher. I; regent it. He doesn't have to re-
somehow you've not applied that
He begged
» Ld "
Write her in care of The Times.)
openings in the teaching business,
and untrained folk walked into
hat You Pay For
We who have slowly climbed the When I was a kid, salary ladder for 25 years now find | ourselves on the same rung with teachers who have made the leap Dear Amazed Parent: That simply goes to prove that school's not jn eight years. what it used to be. Children cry for it! It's taught by people who know pjaint. children and understand how to make them enjoy learning.
We're for it. Your boy's| they'll never know the long struggle — |we have had, glad that 30 cents a | (Your school worries are over |day increases are out. for the summer but Miss Tillie {to you who have realized at last dy doesn't want your letters to stop. | that you'll get a better job of teach-
{tion from Detroit they were op= ——— + posed to food subsides. The delegation went home and started a flood of letters apd other messages— “and both Vandenberg and Fer~ guson voted for subsidies.”
We, the Wome
Social Surprises "Help Marriages ‘To Stay Strong
By RUTH MILLETT “WHY, YOU NEVER told me 1at,” the wife says in a tone of resentment, when her
That's not a com-, We're glad
It's a salute]
| surprised
ing done when you pay the price | 1, 1sband imparts a bit of informa~mee | §4'S . WOrth,
tion to somebody else, Lady, don’t say that. . Your husband has a perfect right
principle when buying education for | schoolrooms to conduct classes, did| bet she misses me. Dad said: “Yes, | port everything he knows to you,
your children, that there were no “takers” for the
INSURANGE GROUP
Walter R. McClure, C. L. U,, local! agent of State Mutual Life Assur-|
the Indianapolis Association of Life! Jnderwriters, August L. Bondi, re-| tiring president, announced today. The new president will take office Monday. Other officers elected at the annual meeting are Herbert J, Havens, Western & Southern Life Insurance Co. 1st vice president; | Grant O. Johnson, C. L. U., Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York, 2d vice president; Carl R. Rhude, FTravelers Insurance Co., secretary, and Nellie A. Polley, Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. treasurer. Directors of the association named for three-year terms are Albert Herrman, John Hancock Life Insurance Co.; Stanley J. Sandberg, National Life & Accident Insurance Co.; Rex E. Kasler, Commonwealth Life Insurance Co.; J. Russell
Townsend Jr., Equitable Life Insurance Co. of Iowa, and Jesse Arnold, Prudential Insurance Co.
. a
Not until you found | you “come to” and pay the higher in more ways than one.” | doesn’t know my teacher. { rep————— — |. YOUR EXPECTING him to—and
y-Product Is Used
price.
But he| joes he? | ” » »
being surprised when he doesn't— makes you look possessive, and makes him look hen-pecked. Besides, his having something to
Successful ly on Cancers, that is as new to you as it is
SAN FRANCISCO, June 29
product of research on atomic fis- |
sity of California medical reported today.
the North American Radium socl-| development of, the atomic bomb.
ety, cited the treatments as the|
(U. carcinoma and In all cases of hy-|
ance Co., was elected president of p) —Radioactive phosphorus, a by- | perderatosis, both of which are | superficial skin cancers.
O. Lawrence,
| to others is good for your marriage. Nothing is more deadly than the “John, tell thém that story about [so-and-so” relationship between | man and wife, each knowing ex-
| The treatment also removed 88.6 : sion, has been used successfully in per cent of warts on the hands, 94 acjly®what the other knows.
the treatment of skin cancer, DI.| hep cont of warts on the sole of the Bertram Low-Beer of the Univer-|foot and 93.6 per cent of warts) school | under fingernails. he treatment was produced in hi Dr..Low-Beer made the report to oo Berkeley eyelotrons PR Prof. Er- surprises in store for him yourself. the vanguard of delegates to the|pegt American Medical association's con-| california Nobel prize winner in’ vention here. The report, read %|physics, who played a major role in
| Let him surprise you once in a while. That's all to the good. ” ” » AND MANAGE to have a few You can't expect your husband to University of show much interest in what you sdf at a social function if you are just repeating the things you have already hashed over with him.
first practical application of atomic FIREMAN FOR FAMED sofn as you know it is just as
research in the treatment of can-
es ' RAIL ENGINEER DIES ™
The report told of five years of secret experiments and outlined ap-|
stn any other relationship. Keep
MADISON, Wis., June 29 (U, P.).|acféw things reserved for just the
d do the same. :
¥ “ i moment—and let your husplication of the treatment, which is|—The man who “shoveled in thg ed mn
as simple as applying a bandage to| coal” for Casey Jones and just a cut, | missed dying with him
He emphasized, however, that the
superficial skin cancers and warts,
deep-seated tumors.
proved | back, saying successful in 51 of 83 cases of cell of x
the| Don't throw a resentful “You in the| lier told me that” dast of cold
famous wreck of engine “69,” was . tribution treatment was applicable only to|buried here yesterday. water on ady fresh con John Eubanks, 72, who fired for L He warned against any hope it can|the engineer on the Illinois Central ‘Ibe applied in the near future to road 48 years ago, died Wednesday oe , {at the Dane coun —~Rites were held today for Wil- BREAK 150,000 STREET LIGHTS Dr. Low-Beer revealed that 301 had been living since he suffered a NEW YORK, June 29 (U. P.) .—! cases of superficial skin cancer and stroke 15 yéars.ago man on the Sullivan Union for the City officials said today last year| warts have been treated here since] He was off du past 35 years. He had been in the cost the city $200,000 in property! 1941. ; printing business for more than 50 damage by vandals. This included | He said the treatmefit ‘years. Mr. Miles died Thursday. 1150,000 broken street lights,
he makes to a general conversation,
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY | Times Special farm where hé |. ELLETTSVILLE, Ind, June 29, —Mr. and Mrs. Walter 8. Peterson | observed their golden wedding an-
the day Casey niversary here Thursday. . The
| Jones was killed. He refused to go|Petersons for a number of years he “wanted no more operated the Tourner hotel at WL he
Bloomington.
5
was George Perinsky, executive sec~
really an upsurge of the common .
