Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1946 — Page 15

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© WEDNESDAY, SEPT. om...

132 Dead in Bombay Rioting,

UNREST GROWS WORSE TODAY N SOME AREAS

"1063 Persons Arrested as Moslems Protest New Regime.

BOMBAY, Sept. 4 (U. P).—~The i official death toll in four days of ! Moslem-Hindu rioting rose to 182 today with 484 reported: injured

RE a TRG Police sald 1063 persons had been rounded up. in connection with. the disorders. A round-the-clock ourfew was lifted in order to allow residents of the affected areas) to buy food, but the situation still - was described ms “very tense,” and was “deteriorating” in at least two suburbs. Although the Moslem league,

French Set Up Zone Within Zone

denies organizing the riots, they are gerierally interpreted as further protest against formation by the British| ‘announced that France has set up

last Sunday of a new Indian gov-| French zone. ernment - headed by Jawaharlal] Coblenz, Mainz and Montabaur (

Lt. Gen. Joseph-Pierre Koenig, commander of French occupation forces in Germany, drew immediate criticism from Russia when he

a new administrative region in the

It combines the Palatinate and the districts of Trier;

shaded area). The central section

Nehru and composed of members of| outlined by a border is the French zone,

UKRAINE WINS

U.S. Agenda Question,

By ROBERT MANNING United Press Staff Correspondent

peace in the Balkans.

Minister | Russian Delegate Andrel A. Gromys

cguncil agenda. by the Dutch, opposed considera-

form.” The vote was 7 to 2 with Australia and Brazil abstaining.

U. 8. Gives Warning

have its complaint heard has been affirmed, the United States—and presumably France--were expected

hen the council convenes to examine the details of the complaint

e predominantly Hindu All- India)

ongress party. Many workers were in Bombiy 21 DIE IN PARIS streets today, celebrating the Parsi

new year. Twenty-eight textile

mills were closed because of absenteeism and others were expected

to shut down tomorrow. Uncollected garbage is piled up in various areas. Unofficial reports said 12 persons Greek had been stabbed to death and 43 injured since the official govern-| ment communique was issued this morning: A United Press correspondent, touring the fighting area, said the streets were covered with bricks and | factory building today as it took off broken glass. He reported that! [from Le Bourget airfield for Lon-| Gurkhas were manning machine don, killing 20 of the 26 persons guns at some street corners and aboard. that heavy military trucks were pe A workman on the ground also trolling the. entire city. was Killed when decapitated by a Shouts of “Allah o_akhbar” (Al.|¥ing of the fallen plane, making| > lah is great) echoed through the, the total death list from the crash| Moslem sections as Hindus charged | Moslems with violating the curfew | Four passengers and two hostesses. last night. . , | survived, airline officials said. ——n |, One of the plane's two motors

ALL ANSWER SCHO SCHOOL failed a few seconds after it was

airborne, and the plane dived into

BELL BUT TEACHERS the building at the edge of the his-

NORWALK, Conn. Sept. 4 (U.| one aufeld. ep P.).—Scheol bells rang to “end| 22 Killed Yesterday summer vacations in Norwalk Ine crash was the second major today; and everyone came but the 9i53Ster on Air France lines within teachers. {34 hours. An Air France pos They're striki 3 (crashed in Denmark yesterday, he Te high for higher Pee | In 22 persons, shortly = after it first to feel the pinch as Superin- | took off from Copenhagen for Paris. dent. Philip G. Jakob told- the Prime Minister Constantine Tsal-| P1800 ‘students to go back to their | GATS of Greece; who had expected’ homes because there was no ome! '° 1 from Paris to London on this to teach them. |morning’s plane, changed his plans The students, in holiday mood. | {at the last minute and left Paris streamed down Mill Hill into the °" the boat train. town's business district. | + Among the victims of the Mis At least 227 of the town's 236 {listed by Air France was a “Miss teachers, all members of the Nor- { Cotrall of the U.S. embassy.’ walk Teachers association, neve) Charles Robin, a police inspector refused to conduct classes until the | 2ttached to Air France, was credited board of estimate restores to the, with saving the six survivors. Mr. board of education's budget $90,112, | {| Robin was taking a drink in a nearor about ‘half the :amount they, 'by cafe.- He rushed into the facdeclared necessary to. meet proposed tory courtyard and, braving the new salary adjustments. | flaming gasoline, pulled. the sur—eee {vivors through a hole in the fuelage DENY TROOP WITHDRAWAL {where the wing had been ripped off. LONDON, Sept. 4 (U. P). —A| He and two factory workers, foreign office spokesman said today | Andre Deschamps and Adrian Bethat “part of an important British | |guin, ‘waded ankle deep in gasoline division” was being remoyed from | to extricate victims. Greece in connection with a re- | “There was a woman we pulled grouping of Britain's forces. but fout of the machine which was then that he knew of no plan for a|flaming like a torch,” Mr. Robin!

general withdrawal of British forces | (said, “Her first remark was ‘I'm from Greece.

Premier Changed Mind, Escapes. 3 PARIS, Sept. 4 (U, P.).—An Air/|

|

|

|

| | |

Rose O°N elll’ # KEWPIE D OLS

Be

Foot high, dimpled and impish, here's the doll. mgmmie loved, cuter than ever, She's made of sturdy composition, dressed in sunsuit, hat, coat, shoes, socks, and every stitch can be faken off: Delight your : little git with this cuddly, cunning Kewpie.

| 398 |

Toys, in the ‘Annex

»

France DC-3 girliner crashed into a |

| not too badly disfigured am I?'",

‘had an unsympathesic ear for the

| quarter. {could struggle along without him.

|seph's “I

{000 recordings and 10,000 copies of

{in December, he'll have some im-

{from Clark field, Manila, to Tok%o0,”

| word of it.”

Vote Registration _ ‘Branches Listed

Branch offices for the registra-|It described the presence of British

| tion. of voters will be open. from 1 p. m.~to 8 p.. m. at the following places: - TODAY

|. Second Ward: 1st precinct, School 63,

2107 -N. Riley; ‘2d precinct, Brookside com- 3 3d precinct, School 8),|88t¢ and a leading advocate of

8th pre-| placing . the

| munity house, | 3126 Brookside Pkwy., N. Dr; cinct, Pire Station. 27, 2018 E 10th st.; 14° precinct, School" 54, 1002 Dearbern; 16th precinct, School 33, 1119 Sterling st.;

{12th precinct, Little Figwer Rectory, 1310 they proved their charges he will

N. Wallace, TOMORROW

23d Ward: 1st precinct, School 56, 23563 Columbia; 2d" precinct, School 69, 3421 | Keystone, 3d precinct, residence, 2931 Manijove ave.; 4th precinct, School 37

12425 E. 25th st.; 6th precinct, Fire Station | ant 2, 1575 Roosevelt ave.; Tth precinct, School

26, 1301 E. 16th st.; 10th precinct, 35th St. Cleaners, 2462 Martindale ave.

REPORT CHINA'S RED ‘CAPITAL’ IN DANGER

NANKING, Sept. 4 (U. P.).—The {official Chinese central news agen- | cy said today that government troops were rolling toward Kalgan, the . Communist-held “capital” of North China, and. that Chihfeng, in! | Jehol province, was expected to fall! to Nationalist troops “momentarily.” The pro-Nationalist news agency ‘denied early reports from” government sources that Chihfeng, last Communist stronghold - in Jehol, | had been captured by Generalissimo | {Chiang Kai-shek’s forces. Communist Negotiator Wang ?ing-nan, meanwhile, * raised the! possibility that Communists might refuse to take part in the new five- | man peace talks scheduled to begin in Nanking. Preliminary - discussions were held yesterday, but Mr. | Wang said the committee, headed | by U. S. Ambassador John Leighton Stuart, “could not possibly” hold its" proposed meeting tomorrow. Mr. Wang insisted that the United States ‘was selling surplus war | materials from the Pacific to ‘Generalissimo Chiang’'s government and said the sales constituted a stumbling block in the peace negotiations. He said that “vast quantities” of surplus American war materials] were “pouring oil on the fire.” The Communist negotiator said | the reported sale “merely confirmed” that United States policy 'was directed toward aiding the Kuomintang (government) party | and was interested “only secondarily in persuading Chiang Kai- | shek to make peace.” “Therefore,” Mr. Wang said, “the | United States must take the great | | responsibility for the deadlocked | peace talks.and the intensified civil war.”

favored. in Tin

Gl "Wows

By PETER KALISCHER United Press Staff Correspondent TOKYO, Sept. 4.—Tin pan alley

songs of Sgt. Isaac K. Joseph when he lived-in Greenwich village, but today he's knocking ‘em dead in Japan, Sgt. Joseph said the music moguls | “ignored” him when he was at home in New York's Bohemian Broadway, it appeared,

In Japan it's different. Sgt. JoKnow,” and “Plain Spoken” have sold more than 60,-

sheet music. ‘Wows 'Em on Ginza’ When he returns. to New. York

pressive evidence”of how he “wowed! ‘em on the ginza.” “The most inspired piece of music I ever wrote was if a B-17 flying

the sergeant said. - “The plane got as far as Okinawa twice and had to turn back each time, The name of the song was ‘Home Again’—and I meant every

It ‘was “Home Again” that started Sgt. Joseph on his Oriental rise to | fame. Joe’ Mazzola of Los Angeles san, the number with his 8th army band over JOAK, Japanese station [in Tokyo. Then camé the song publishers {and talent. scouts from fhe Ernie | Pyle theater, biggest GT. amysement center in the Pacific. Did Sgt. Joseph want to join the theater as a staff song writer? Did ft v

| locker?

performed at Dachau, notorious

The complaint charges that the Greek monarchy threatens peace in the JBalkans by suppressing minorities within Greece and infringing on the sovereignty of neighboring countrfes, especially Albania.

troops in the only Balkan country not dominated by Russia as “the principal factor” in this alleged threat to the peace. Herschel V, Johnson, U. 8. dele-

complaint on the agenda, sérved notice on Messrs. Manuilski and Gromyko that unless

move for “summary dismissal” of the case without regard for “the feelings or pride of the complainant or any supporter of the complain-

Similar to Former Case

The U, 8. and Britain, with active [ba cking from the Netherlands, were expected to drive for the same solufou SHueiey six months ago in n when Russia sought council lone with respect to British troops in Greecet At that time the council | closed the case by adopting an in- | nocuous “resolution ‘which merely jnotea that English soldiers still were in Greece. - Mt. Manuilski, armed with two | suitcases of evidence related to his complaint, ‘and Greek Ambassador Vassili Dendramis were scheduled to | take seats at. the council table and participate .in the discussion. In addition to the" prospect of {long arguments over the Ukrainian | complaint, the council faced a deci{sion on another matter which has {not yet been placed on the agenda —the surprise Russian request that the council demand from all the United Nations reports on the dis(position and size of armed forces in foreign countries other than | former enemy states. i -

{ © Britain and U. S. Opposed |

{It was likely that the Ukrainian case would-be finished first, because { Mr. Manuilski left the Paris peace | conference tO present his government’s case personally. After the | Ukrainian case is finished, ‘Mr. Gromyko's proposal on the armed {forces was expected to meet stub- | born Amétican and British opposi- | tion, One reason for this opposition is [that the Soviet plan would make {public full data on U, S. troops in |China ‘and Iceland and British | troops in Greece, Tr ansjordania and Iraq, but would not require Russia to describe Red army forces in the ex-enemy countries of eastern | Europe. : A second reason was that seme of the delegates were irked by Ambassador Gromyko’s departure from council rules. in introducing the Russian proposal without first submitting it in writing and circulating it for the required three days.

Pan Alley,

'Em' in Japan

he have any more songs in his foot-

Sgt. Joseph's commanding officer in technical intelligence gave him the green light, and he was off to become a mainstay of the Japanese hit parade. “Songs?” he said. “I've got a million of 'em—all rejected.” He sold “I Know” and “Plain, Spoken” to the Tajima Music Publishing Co outright. Now he thinks he should have held out for royalties The Tajima firm assigned their number one’, vocalist—a beautiful Japanese girl—to plug the songs over the Japanese networks. “I tried to date her twice,” Sgt. Joseph said, “but each time she brought her ——“ along.”

LIFE FOUND POSSIBLE AT 30,400-FT. LEVEL

WASHINGTON, _ Sept. 4 (U, P). —The army air forces revealed today that ‘Nazi scientists using human guinea pigs found that _humans can survive without oxygen at altitudes as great ‘is 30,400 feet —higher than Mt. Everest. The AAF revealed the contents of secret German army medical reports on the results of research

Nazi concentration camp. The reports were made to Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler: + . The reports said a series of ‘subJects, “either Jews or professional criminals” managed to survive ‘when subjected to altitudes up to

rr ———— ome——g

HEARING. AT UN

Britain Split on

LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Sept. 4. The western powers were expected to present a united front in the United Nations security council today against the Ukraine's charge that Greece and Britain threaten

.The western powers split, tempo|rarily, last a over ther the

’ charge By - a eS, RE ea te

The. United States and France voted to permit Ukfainiah Foreign Dmitri "Manuilskl and

tion of the complaint “in its present

Now that the .Ukraine's right to

Ny

to oppose the charge late today|

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

®

ko to place the complaint on the|: Britain, backed

30,400 feet in test Pesturel vam. bers.

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