Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1946 — Page 25

15, 1946

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THURSDAY, AUG. 1, 1946

CHILD INJURED

Thomas Botts, 3, of 1006 Carrollton ave., was taken to City hospi today with a head injury after pha ing off a box in a day nursery at 3720 N. Meridian st,

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. COUNTY BUDGET FUND SLASHED

= 250,000 or Retirement Plan Cut Out.

| cut out of the general fund budget for next year requests totaling some $250,000 to set up a pension retirement plan for county employees. The city council turned down a similar proposal for municipal workers last week. William T, Ayres, a county com- { missioner, explathed that the pro-

posed pension would be difficult to | set up for county workers,

g | Applies To Just a Few

| “At best it could be applied to | only a few employees because of the | political turnover in personnel every two years in some offices and four years in others,” he said.

‘Mr. Ayres explained that inclu-| stages of syphillis can be effectively sion of retirement funds in the 1947 treated by giving them malaria and

| budget would require a four-cent increase in the tax rate, He said the commissioners had decided not to increase the tax | rate any more than necessary.

| weeks ago disclosed only a few | would sign up for pension enrollment if it were offered.

‘DULLES’ SON PLANS

TO BECOME PRIEST

NEW YORK, Aug. 15 (U. P).—

Dulles, foreign affairs the Republican party,

expert

on-Hudson at Poughkeepsie, (priesthood, it was announced today.

in the affairs of the | Presbyterian church. He recently returned from Cambridge, England, ! where he served as chairman of the

| International Conference of World

Churches.

| U. 8. public health service.

o

id

|

for

The county commissioners have

A poll of county workers several for two years at John Hopkins

Avery Dulles, 27, son of John Foster |jsithe treatment of choice.”

has entered treated with malaria and penicillin the Jesuit novitiate of St. Andrews- showed improvement in body weight, N. Y.] {to train for the Roman Catholic |they | group | The elder Dulles has been very | ments alone improved. prominent ceiving

The Rev, John J. Cavanaugh « + » not used to being president of Notre Dame,

NEW TREATMENT OF SYPHILIS REPORTED

CHICAGO, Aug, 15 (U, P).~— Persons suffering from the late

then administering penicillin, three Baltimore doctors reported today. The doctors reported in the American Medical Association Jour='nal that they had conducted tests

| university in co-operation with the

prs. Frank W. Reynolds, Charles Mohr and Joseph Earl Moore the penicillin-malaria treatment “is so superior to those with penicillin alone in late syphillis of the central nérvous system that it

Seventy-five per cent of patients tremor and handwriting,

Only 50 per cent of a penicillin treat-

speech, sald. receiving

Fifty-three per cent of those rethe double treatment im-

proved in mental condition. .Only 45 per cent of those whq received | penicillin alone showed improved mental condition.

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GRID PROFITS EXPENDED FOR STUDENT WORK

‘Real Notre Dame’ Does . Not Make Headlines, President Says.

By EDWIN A. LAHEY Times Special Writer SOUTH BEND, Ind, Aug. 15.— The sports writers (quite without malice) have tended to suppress the fact that the Holy Cross fathers [run a university in connection with that Notre Dame football team, Surprising ‘as it may seem to the {| millions of synthetic alumni of the University of Notre Dame, football is of secondary importance to the job of contributing the university's goodly share of the spirtiual, cultural, patriotic and academic life of our country. The new president of Notre Dame, the Rev. John J, Cavanaugh, C.8.C, is eager to talk about this “real Notre Dame, the important part that doesn't make the headlines.” Father Cavanaugh is 47, a native of Owosso, Mich, and a graduate | of the 1923 class at Notre Dame. | Formerly in Advertising He was an advertising man for Studebaker Corp. until 1826, when he surrendered to an obvious call to the priesthood. Father Cavanaugh is of medium height and trim physique, with black hair, hazel eyes, and what an old terrier would call “a good Irish face.” He has a disarming cordiality with visitors and a charming modesty about “not being used to being president.” When he talks of the meaning of liberal education, of the meaning of “success” for the university he heads, there are touches of Plato, Aristotle, 8t. Thomas Aquinas and Cardinal Newman in his observa-! tions. The highest happiness of man, Father Cavanaugh points out, comes from the highest exercise of his faculties. Means to Happiness The educational process is a means by which man is able to use

And when would Father. .Cavanaugh regard a graduate of Notre Dame as a “success”? “Perhaps I shouldn't say this,” he

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

otre Pame Football Helps Hundreds Pay For Ed

This pictare, obtained from Le

family, accused by the army criminal investigation division of operating an international black market.

Left to right are: Alfred, 27, New

L., 59, father, New York; Oscar, 20, former navy lieutenant and now ip the export business, Paris; and Robert, former navy lieutenant, now Managing UNRRA in Shanghai,

RAIN DOESN'T DAMPEN 1018T

Reunion of Bastogne Heroes ‘Rolls Merrily On.

“80 it's rainy and damp! Bo what!” Down went a Jigger of scotch , ,. and: the second day of the threeday reunion of the 101st Airborne division association here continued | its roaring pace. “Nuts to the weather,” chorused| the former members of the famous division at the Lincoln hotel.

7

wis Warner in Berlin, shows the last reunion of the New York Warner

York; Lewis, 22, employee of American Overseas airways, Berlin; David

Berlin Brother Asserts He Had Small Share in Deals

BERLIN, Aug. 15 (U. P).—Lewis Warner, 23-year-old member of! an alleged Berlin-New York-Shanghai black market organization, said

than he in explaining the family's operations. The former air force lieutenant said his absolving himself of implication in any “big deals.” market charges against his family had been “greatly exaggerated.” “I am not trying to get off the port business raft and leave my family on it,” he! for them all.” said. “I am sticking by my family.”| He said he received 140,000 marks “I admit. the charge that I had for selling 100 watches in Berlin {dealings on the black market, but and that he had sent the entire {1 don’t say to what extent,” he de- amount to his brother Oscar in

first Interest was in He said the black

to establish a legitimate export-im-“which would be good

Two-Day Exhibition to Start:

today that his father and three brothers would have a harder time,

~T0 FILL SKIES

Saturday,

Indianapolis skies will be filled with swooping and: zooming planes this week«end, ‘Residents here will have an op~ portunity to see many of the latest developments in aviation at Stout field. Beginning at 10:30 a. m, Satur day, a gigantic air show will be cons ducted by the clvil air patrol and the army air forces for two days to make the public aware of air power importance in peace time. The nation’s top stunt flyers, ine cluding Beverly Howard, America's champion acrobatic pilot, will fly their planes through dangerous and sensational maneuvers, Tickets on Sale Captured German and Japanese alrcraft and alr equipment will be on display. ' Latest models of both civilian and military planes will be exhibited. Even model airplanes will take their place on the pro= gram with demonstration flights of gas-powered models by members of the Indianapolis Gas Model. assoclation. Mayor Tyndall will deliver the opening address at the show and

| Governor Gates also will talk.

Tickets for the air carnival, the 23d of its kind in the nation, are on sale at L. Btrauss & Co. and the downtown Hook drugstores for $1.50. Children under 12 will bé admitted free,

MEDICAL COLLEGES | ENROLLMENT SMALL:

By Sclence Service CHICAGO, Aug. 15~The smalla

| clared. * | Paris for conversion. The criminal | Lewis was under a “house-work" | investigation division of the army, arrest in Berlin. He is allowed to he added, apparently had caught|

est freshman enrollment in Ameris can medical schools in many years

And they waited the reply from jagve his billet and work at a Oscar with most of the money in this fall will include 60 per cent

their former colorful leader, Ma}. Gen. Anthony C. McAuliff, they waited in vain, General Not Anticipated Although he as expected to tend the American Legion convention beginning here Saturday, the general was not anticipated at the reunion of “his boys.”

But | seas airways, but is not free to roam |

| meteorologist for American Over- his possession, Lewis said the letters seized by

about the city, the CID, some of which were roundLewis said he had not made “one! robin reports of the group's ac-

at- (cent” on the Berlin black market | tivities, “show that I did not want

and that he had urged his family|to operate”

‘Missing One-Masted Sloop Makes Port

veterans and 12 per cent women, the journal of the American Medi cal association observes editorially today. Warning that veterans must not be admitted to medical schools unless they are fully qualified, the editorial expresses the hope that | there will not be included men

Among his more famous activi- | arthur Gerard, commodore of the, The search was called off when who were rejected by medical -

ties in the crack para- troop divi-| sion, the general is associated with the cry “Nuts!” to a German re-| quest to surrender when his troops were the “hole in the doughnut” during the bloody Bastogne battles in January, -1945;

laughs, “but 8 man is a real success

do it." The subject is not brought up, but | one suspects that Father Cavanaugh learmed the real meaning of

success to enter religion in 1926. While Notre Dame for 104 years| has been most concerned with help- | ing the students (normal enrollment 3200, 1946 enrollment 4200) develop the “intellectual virtues,” which automatically . unfold the moral virtues, it has had some economic benefits from its spectacular football teams.

This is of less magnitude, however, than the alumni generally realize.

The muscle-rippling young Poles | from Chicago, Gary and Detroit who make the football lineup of the “Fighting Irish” return a net revenue of about $240,000 per year | to the university. (This is the net | after the football receipts’ make up | the deficits in other athletic activities.) This $240,000 is what Notre Dame university pays out in “wages to students who wait tables and do maintenance work to earn part of their tuitidpn. Must Make Grades

80 the football stalwarts actually provide the wherewithal for hun-| dreds of students to finance their education, Here is another fact that is probably not widely known: A student at Notre Dame cannot compete in athletics (and that in-|

cludes big-time football) unless he| maintains an average of 77 in his studies. | This minimum for athletes is seven points above the flunking

grade of 70 and five points below | the median grade of the entire stu-

dent body, which is 82. The student. body at Notre Dame probably is a fair cross-section of middle - class and upper = middle- |

| class America {

Ostentation of wealth or pov erty | 18 poor taste. There are no fraternities or other vehicles for social stratification on] the elm-fringed campus of Notre] Dame, where the students live in| “halls.” About 8 to 10 per cent of the dent body is non-Catholic,

stu-|

Snr

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?

{and Lt,

| Burope and the D-Day

| Néw York Athletic Club yacht di-| the yacht made port under sail | vision, had a real sea story to tell . d tied up at the coast today of the three days he spent, power ane P on his one-masted sloop the Aka- | guard station at Fire island. | wa off Long Island, adrift in rough| Gerard said he ran out of fuel | seas with no fuel for the engine. | just off Montauk Point at the east- | Shortly |

An intensive search for the sloop| ern tip of Long Island.

| schools previously or many who will {lack incentive and ability. Of the 28 per cent of the exe pected classes who are non-veteran | men, 11 per cent are physically dis« ! quatthed, 7 per cént occupationally defered, 1 per cent under 18 and

But the convention rolled on this| "0 tag by coast guard PBYs' after heavy seas washed away a 9 per cent other non-veterans.

morning wtih a general assembly |

when he knows what God wants|presided over by Maj. Gen. Maxwell | [co him to do and has the discipline to |D: Taylor, president of the assoctar superitendent of West

[tion and { Point. Told of Future Plans

Here the boys were told of future Shot Words when oe turned hi plans for the association. They were h* on e. certainty of worldly told of the drive to enlist 20,000

former G.I’s who soldiered with the outfit, At present only 3200 are members of the association. The Bastogne Battle boys were also informed that a book glorifying the outfit from its inception at amp Clayborne, La., on Aug. 18, 1942, to its final deactivation in November, 1945, is ready for publication. Maj, Carl E. Trimble, secretarytreasurer of the association, reported that Lt. Leonard Rappaport Arthur Northwood, former officers of the outfit, were polishing up a 240,000-word book. ‘Blue Goose’ to Pace Race

There was also talk of concerning Gen. Taylor's ambition to secure permanent lodging at West Point for Hermann Goering's famous Mercedes Benz captured by the division at Berchtes The “Blue ” will be In action again this afternoon when Wilbur Shaw, president of the Indianapolis Speedway, paces a stock

{ car race at the oval in “Goering’s

Jeep.” In between meetings, the G. 1.s of

| the 101st congregated in the hotel

and in the special 14th floor bar talking about activities in Central jump and | Bastogne and on and on. “Just a pleasant get-together . . .

| non-political,” insisted the associa- | tion leaders.

The convention will end until next year with a banquet at 7 p. m. tonight and a farewell bhreakfast at 9 a. m. tomorrow,

SEEKS MORE NURSES FOR POLIO AREAS

The Red Cross today called for additional volunteer graduate nurses

to aid polio victims in areas where

outbreaks of the diseases have occurred.

Mrs. C. G. Culbertson, Red Cross disaster committee on nurses di- { rector, said nurses may volunteer

by calling her at Broadway 4902 or the Red Cross at

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The number of women admitted

‘Gerard's passengers lneluded is appreciably more than admitted “not as. large a8 .

but might have been anticipated.”

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