Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1946 — Page 7
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THURSDAY, SEPT, 1
Moscow Earns: to.Send+
Delegates to
1948
U. S. Meeting
In New York Sept. 20h
‘By 'FREDERI
CK WOLTMAN
Scripps-Howard Staff Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 12.—An ambitious plan to sell the Slavic American young people of this country on the Soviet Union, its policies and its Balkan mouthpiece,” Marshal Tito.of Yugoslavia, will be started in New York Sept. 20, it was learned today. It will be master-minded by the American Slav congress, recently
revealed by the New York World-
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Telegram as a propaganda agency
engaged in glorifying the Tito regime. A “call to all Slavic American
youth” has been sent out over the signature of George Pirinsky, executive secretary of the congress. Its aim, he said, is to form a “national council of Slavie American youth clubs , . . to serve as a center and co-ordinator of Slavic youth in America.” Mr. Pirinsky is former editor of the Bulgarian-Macedonian -Communist: weekly—Saznanle. On Aug. 31, 1935, the Dally Worker, American communist organ, carried a eulogy, by Mr. Pirinsky. of Georgl Dimitroff, then head of the Communist international,
2000 Delegates Expected
Another signer of the Slav youth call is Leo Krzyski, president of
mated Clothing Workers of America! and members of the C. I. O. Political Action Committee. The Soviet-created all-Slav congress in Moscow will send delegates to the third American Slav congress which will meet here | Sept. 20, the Daily Worker reported
| Sept. 2. Altogether 2000 delegates
in
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{| Slavic “descent,
1! i
{}l organizations repudiate
are expected. The Slavic American youth groups which this congress will attempt to coalesce under the Soviet banner include -Polish, Bulgarian, Russian, Ukranian, Czech, Slovak,
|}| Serb, Croat and Macedonian, | The American Slav congress was
set up April 25, 1942, as an out(growth of the all-Slav congress Which the Soviet Communists created in Moscow on April 4, 1042. | Ickes Spoke at One Rally Meanwhile, its success in attractling the support of prominent Americans is described in a booklet writ{ten by Mr. Pirinsky and published | last March by the American Slav | | congress.
| | Harold L. Ickes, while secretary of | 1! the interior, spoke at one-8lav con- {§) gress rally and read a greeting from | Messages of | | support were received from Henry! i}l Wallace, Senator Mead (D. N, Y)),
| President Roosevelt.
now Democratic candidate for governor of New York, and William O'Dwyer, then mayor-elect. | Actress Myrna Loy spoke at one
| citizens committee of the arts, scijences and professions.
McNutt Listed as Guest ‘gress in 1942, the Pirinsky booklet
{of war mobilization; R. J. Thomas, [ther president of the C. I. O. United | Auto Workers, and David Mac- { Donald, secretary-treasurer of the {C, I. O. United Steel Workers. | The guests for the second Slav | congress included Senator Pepper
| (D. Fla.), Oscar Lange, since made
{ Polish ambassador to the United
| time secretary of the national citi{zens P. A C.
the fantastic claim that the con- | expressing the aspirations of more
{than 10 million Slavic Americans.” | Actually,
leading Slavic American the Slav]
{nation’s
| CONgress.
i}! Mr, Pirinsky states the congress’
| aspirations in his booklet. They [}{ follow the Communist party line of {China India, Greece, bomb and Russia's role in Europe,
EX-G.L'S TAKE TO AIR SEATTLE (U.P. .—The regional war “veterans administration has
nounced that flying under the G.I. bill of rights begins
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the American Slav congress, vice| president of the C. I. O. Amalga- |
{rally in behalf of the independent
| | As guests at the first Slav con-|
{lists Paul V. McNutt, then director |
| States, and Clark Foreman, at the,
In a foreword, Mr. Pirinsky makes |
| gress today “lias become the voice |
eight million usually is, set as the total of all Americans of | and many of the!
and atom
{
planned on helping ex-G.1s take to! the air. VA officials in Seattle an-| instruction |
SHINN NGG
New Ambassador
Hume Wrong, Cahadian undersecretary of state for external affairs has been named the dominfon’s ambassador to the United
States. He is neo stranger to Washington, having served as first secretary and counselor at the Canadian legation before it was raised to an embassy, and as a member of the Pacific war council during world war tI.
ON TENNESSEE ‘DEAL
6, 0, P. IS DELIGHTED
WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 (U: P.). —Republican party spokesnien took keen delight today in a Democratic charge that there's a conspiracy afoot to tufh Tennessee over to the G. O. P. in 1048, “We'd be only too glad to cooperate,” said a prominent Republican national committee official, who ‘added that he couldn't remember when the southern state had done anything but elect Democrats to congress except in the two eastern districts. Republicans, however, shied away
from the “catch” in the alleged deal—co-operation with Tennessee's| Democratic machine boss, Ed Crump, Memphis.
Plan Seen To Sell Sov Ameen ) outh On Red Polic
11,000 Chetniks in [Te Refuse to Go Home
EBOLI, Italy, Sept. 12 (U. P).—
They do want a plebiscite, a true
“We held elections in camp to de-|
Dead Draja Mikhailovitch's 11,000 democratic form of government, termine how~ many of the 11,000
Chetniks hold this town of 10,000 residents and are given more freedom than their 100 British guards.
And they do not want to return to Marshal Tito's Yugoslavia, A thousand. Chetnik' tents are! pitched in the olive orchards around Eboli, near Salerno. Martial music resounds in their midst. A trumpet calls the Chetniks to play and to drill, to pray and to eat.| There is reveille and retreat. In tents and officers’ hang Mikhailovitch's pictures in golden frames and draped in black.
Camp signs are posted in frames
decorated with black ribbons in token of mourning for the executed Mikhailoviteh.
Some of the signs read: “This is
[a royal Yugoslav army camp.”
In spite of the Chetnik royalist
with the safeguard of person, prop- | erty and civil rights, » In one respect they haven't |
{changed at all: They remain bit- small sections,
terly anti- Communist. The only time the British guards show their control of the camp is
[when incidents happen between the Italians and the Chetniks. On {several . occasions Chetniks have
quarters (been fired upon in the dark. Six
‘have been wounded and a captain | killed, | Italian authorities said. the captain was killed by (Tito's secret police). Col. Sava Andrich said there were many OZNA agents active in {Naples and even in Eboll. | “They spread propaganda against
Wes be glad to have Tennes- | tradition, the Eboli Chetniks do not [the allies and call upon the Chet-
' the spokesman said. “But we rt be able to use Mr. Crump. '
{stand uncompromisingly {return of the king.
for the
| niks to return home,” he said, "But [nobody wants to 80 to Tite.
it's fun!
|
~
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want to go back. Only six chose hod do so.” The camp at Eboli is divided into Fach tent has a little vegetable garden. Everyone helps tend the gardens
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fully built shaded bamboo arbors serve for the higher officers to sit and talk politics. There are about 1000 Ohetnik women in the camp. Most of them work in their own hospitals, Personnel can roam within a fivemile’ radius of the camp and go to Paestum, the seashore, one-of the bloodiest beachheads of the Italian campaign, As yet they don't print their own periodical literature owing to the ban by the British on political activity, But they get newspapers from outside, some from as far away as Munich,
FLOUR AND GLASS PRICES ARE HIKED
WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 (U.P), ~The OPA today increased retail flour prices one to two cents a five~ pound package, ralsed“the price of window glass 18 per cent and ree moved more than 20 other items from controls. OPA officials sald the retail price of sugar will be increased one and one-half cents a pound later this week, The increase in flour prices will not mean a boost in the price of bread. The jump in the price of window glass, however, means an increase of $1.25 in the cost of glass for low-cost homes.
rh —————————— MAN GOES BAREFOOT LARAMIE, Wyo. (U.P). —Lack of inhibitions might have been to blame. Then again, it might have been the sheer joy of summertima, Anyway, a man was seen in the business district in his bare feet,
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