Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1946 — Page 9

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IPT. 20, 1946 [| FRIDAY, SEPY. 26 1048. ___ -

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el : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES AL at PAGE .9 UNION AIR STATION Io "| Speech Returns (Major's: Son Dies in Naples,

DEA TO BE TESTED

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Mark Smith, 51-year-old farmer, who lost his speech during shelling in world war I, lets out-a” lusty yell following the return of his speech while in: Veterans Ad-

ministration hospital at Vancouver, Wadh., for a kidney all- | ment. Mr. Smith was asked to | submit to an experimental dose | of sodium pentothal, a drug to induce hypnotism. He was told to count until falling asleep—it worked. He awoke counting out loud.

HOMES CAN HAVE MTL SINSHNE

By Science Service QUEBEC, Canada, Sept. 20—If you want artificial sunshine within your home, you can get it, but it takes a combination of various electric lights to approximate sunlight {of the summer. noonday kind, with {ultraviolet rays to give a mild sunburn and -infra-red radiation with their heating effects. Dr. G. F. Prideaux, a General Electric lighting scientist, told the | Illuminating Engineering society here today how he produced artificial sunshine. He used 300-watt | lamps for the red and Infra-red | radiation; 3000-watt mercury lamps for the blue end of the visible spectrum; white fluorescent lamps to fill | the gap between the mercury and {the tungsten lamps; and special | sunlamps to produce’ the ultraviolet | A thin layer of water was used to | filter out the longwave infra-red, much as does the water vapor in | the atmosphere. | “Approximately one-third -of the energy generated is removed by the water filter,” he said, “one-third more is removed by ventilation above the lamp bank, and the remaining third is radiated into the room and must be removed by ventilation to keep the air temperature down to a comfortable 80 de{grees Fahrenheit.” Such sunshine rooms, he stated, should be of inter- | est to convalescent hospitals, ath[letic clubs, and progressive indus- | trial plants.

WANTS EX-GI TO BE OUR NEXT PRESIDENT

SALAMANCA, N. Y, Sept. 20 (U P.) —Banbridge Colby, Bemus Point, N. Y. secretary of state in the

|

Wilson cabinet, yesterday urged that the next president of the United States Be a veteran of world war. IT

Army 'Negligence' Charged WESTOVER FIELD, Mass. Sept. 20 (U. P).—A U, 8 army major from Nulmine, Pa. charged today that his infant son died as result of “shocking” treatment accorded his family in Naples, Italy, by the army. He said other officers and their families received similar treatment, . Ma). Victor L. Oddi, a 32-year-old former high school teacher, contended that army officials operated the port of Naples staging area in “Buchenwald-like” manner and that officials in charge there were guilty of “criminal negligence.” His personal investigation, contended Maj. Oddi, indicated that hundreds of war brides and their children were victims of the “worst

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instance of mishandling of the war bride program in all Europe.” He said he was warned by a lieutenant colonel from the inspector general's office to “keep your nose out of this, we're handling it.” He said his 21-year-old Italian wife was subjected to harsh treatment and that as result of the conditions under which his family was forced to live one of his twin sons died. He said during a 14-day quarantine period an army doctor ignored his wife's pleas to aid their sick child, As result, he contended, one of his sons died after being taken to a hospital and placed in a bed that consisted of a crude, unventilated packing case.

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Addressing a civic welcome-home party here, Mr. Colby said he had | an idea that whose names are before us as candidates for the presidency in 1948 measures up to the needs of the country. He urged veterans to repel trends | | toward selfishness, greed and hatred for “you are going to save your country again from difficulties that come, not from without, but which arise from within our own numsbers.”

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