Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1946 — Page 19
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Ir. Fletcher, The ooking jaws with nen (and women) cherism, after Fletcherism it, Dr. Emile Coue day in every way, 1en, for some reas Ir spiritual condie 5 time to vitamins,
Exile like: Mussolini. He nthe has a great ’. A large minority any collaboration , wing is led by an of the present Mr, Nenni wants ) remain separate
justice until June, nistries allotted to nment in order to 3 party. The Come lv because of Rus= 8s for Trieste and e Communists and cent of the June ferculean strength LA
\rea ' TY LEADERS is eld by 4 man withm all threé parties
ies president of the 1 Naples all during the Duce's offer of ren credit for have 1el to give up his d the monarchyf never announced y or republic. Hig narchists, however, a king, while the n wanted a repubith a Neapolitan
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n in the schools— gestapo methods the knee politically, chers. at to withdraw acyr to act. He fired i replaced a pume ers, though it was ig that had been
retrated the thick e of the civic-cone rate to take a look le. existed under variChicago became & ike those elsewhere, reaps its profits to its lieutenants by re, contracts for all supplies, Including otection for liquor, Invesjigation somes of the ward leaders
der which explains why r. “Liberal and ine ould support a Ree sndent sort, though orting just any Re= er big city machine
run again. He let ns in November are icans would like to ive them a start for ing. The continued g the leaders, as 18 ands by both Mayor ireen to get out and
loomed
s. Another cleaned e flood of incoming 1ts turned formerly to Midases. Every-g-power in the city ollwethers and given
cracy, the war-rich,
ig cynically at the proved by the ine 3, , claim of one-tenth shipbuilders-will be unchallenged. the general feeling. ar wastes a lot of yn production.” Anda mittee once praised perating under the in the natiom. a new C-2 freighter he¢ house merchant -hang anything on
red industry mushwv of the shipyard ity's seams, exploitation fill tha ct. ansfusion was worth st the taxpayer.
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FRIDAY, SEPT. 27,198 ___~_ “
FOR PASSI0
Spectacle in 1948, But Faces Difficulties.
By: DAVID M. NICHOL Times Poreign Correspondent OBERAMMERGAU, .. Germany, Sept.” 27.—Like everything else in Germany, thé famous Passion Play will be slow in resuming. Alois Lang, who played the role of Christ in the last two performances, says the cast—which means the entire village—hopes to produce its first postwar spectacle in 1948. But the future is filled with troubles, some of which Mr. Lang realizes vividly, others only vaguely.
In the first place, permission of the American military government AYS J APS HOLD fri es must be obtained. |
Sounds sin- |
REVIVAL PLAY
* Oberammergau Hopes to Produce First Post-War
thorough screenings of every per80 who “per- : forms punticly» Attribute Fact to Statesoa Oberaiiser- manship of Gen. MacArthur deep religious Times Washington Bureau ) : connotations, has; WASHINGTON, Sept. 27.—Wise Mr. Nichot P°¢" 2 Well-long humane statesmanship of Gen. ler 1h the pest known ‘Naxi cen- Douglas MacArthur, coupled with There is the question, also, of the warm friendliness of the averhousing visitors, without whom the |age G, I, has wiped out Japanese performance would be little more resentment of the atomic bombing a Tar & FOO. 1OF Bishop John F. O'Hara of Buffalo rent would have the allied govern- feporied upon returning from ment down his throat immediately. The bishop, whose family long
Bavaria is thronging with refugees. |, . e lived in Indianapolis, is a And Oberammergau’s residents are! rmer president of Notre Dame now more than twice the pre-war university Deure ot 3000. GC Riv ul He expressed his reactions to the a the Perigimanee » ses, 4 Japan trip in addressing the sixth i oprasenly hi ich RE Iuisees (national convention of the Society B 1940, The war prevented that. le, ye’ no amation of the Fath in spite of Nazi efforts to continue |, New York City. They were rethe tradition, which had been un- | ; Vor A : ted in the New York as broken for 300 yedrs. The first) po ; rk Tunes “regular” production in the 10-year | cycle will not be given until. 1950 Have Tremendous Affection —if then. “The Japanese people feel no reLocal problems include finding sentment for the destruction in someone to play the ¢entral role of their land caused. by two atomic Christ. Mr. Lang, at 56, says he| : : is too old for what is one of the [DPS They really have a jremen- | world’s most strenuous parts. dous affection for Americans due to
Shows Signs of Age |the wise and humane statesmanship | : {of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. It is certainly true that in the ° 51; vears since I last saw him hel “They regard General MacArthur has ‘aged greatly His ebony hair |28 their great benefactor, to whom and bristling | black beard are now | Dey surely will erect a statue some almost gray. ' {day, as well as to the kindness and “Perhaps,” he said, “I'll speak the | 800d nature of the American G. L's, prologue and understudy the part | VIO have won their hearts. “of Christ : A Wien 1 evenly Visita Japan, 9 . : the people told me. they actually 11 k y Mea bind oo une lala, were grateful for the atomic bombseems to sand out "There aren't | N88 that broke the power of their many young men One hundred and | military rulers. They were unablé to fifty of our people were either killed, EYeRk this poWer nd ay hme or are still missing in prison camps.” | 8 ary " ending the war Mr. lang is not alone. Almost after the Philippines were lost. everyone of the central figures from Material Needs Many the last performance in 1930 is now| “Of course, the material needs of too old, although no one is missing. | the people of Japan today are posiie Jona, Sor yale orpe, maDY. But the spirit is there and but never left his native Bavarian |'N€Y are about the most energetic Alps. people in the world. They are work‘Mary’ Ruled Out ing from dawn to dusk to restore
Anni Ruts, who played the part “My train arrived in Nagasaki two of Mary, was in Oberammergau |yourq° Jate. But 1000 people were throughout the war and later was still waiting to “greet me and mv a translator for the U. 8. army In| companions. They asked us to bless near-by Garmisch. She cannot re- |g Catholic school that had been repeat, however, because local tradi- pyilt after being destroyed by the tion proscribes any woman over 38/5i0m bomb that fell there. in the cast.
. “They told me that there were Mr. Lang, a tall, foreceful man.'\ ore Christians in Nagasaki than talked with us in the garden of his|in anv other part of Japan, but they pension, which is now requisitioned. 4 peen cruelly persecuted for four as an officers’ club. He still retains .onturies.” : his ‘woodcarving shop in the rear
of his own separate quarters in Be
arse: first U. 8. forces here,” he! Asks End of Mud
#aid, “wanted us.to produce the] play immediately. But, we couldn't! Roads to School do that. It requires at least a year! to prepare. Unless it is done well, | it isn't worth doing at all. We! have had no practice since the war
began.” ; y the American scene, or many of Costumes Available the 4,400,000 rural children who The theater and costumes are are transported to modern censtill here in good shape. One thing| tralized schools will continue to
. ‘That | plegtbut it isn't. | It involves! {
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 27.—The old mud road leading to the “little red-school house” must pass from
their homes and their Crops. yo
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which can’t be hurried, however, is the growing of beards and long hair. Tradition requires that for a year before the performanée no one may shave or have a haircut. Most - intimately concerned with this 1s the village barber. We asked him what he did. “Nothing,” he said. “Rehearse, and I have to let my hair grow, ° More prosaically, he draws damages from the village council for the year-long period and hopes, like everyone else, that Oberammergau may come again into its own.
GAS UNITS KILL WEEDS
WASHINGTON—The truck-borne giant army gas -decontaminating units have found peacetime uses; with relatively slight adaptation they are being employed as spraying equipment to protect cattle from insects and kill weeds in pastures.
Ancient Carnivore Found In Colombian Sandstone
By Science Service BERKELEY, Sept. 27.—Abofit 30 million years ago a fantastic beast in what is now the Magdalena valley, in the republic of Colombia, gobbled up a small - rodent, and lay down to lick his chops, He never got up. Something hit him, and he was buried under a pile of fine sand before he had finished ‘digesting his lunch. Today - University of California paleontologists are studying the fossilized remains of both him and his last snack.
be “ten-o'clock scholars” on snowy and muddy, days. According to Charles M. Upham, engineer-director of the American Road Builders’ association. 40,000 consolidated schools require from 80,000 to 90,000 busses which travel an average of 25 miles daily in one-way operation. There are at least 10,000 other schools that should be centralized, but most of them are on mud roads. Fhe dollar-and-cents value of all-weather surfaces for secondary or side-roads will benefit rural education, as well as farmers who have to take produce to town. Mr. Upham also suggested that taxpayers will be glad to learn that the average transportation cost of $24.50 per rural pupil for a year is actually less than the same pupil would spend in streetcar or bus fare in the average city.
prehistoric group of animals re- | lated to the’ porcupine and guinea
| pig. The rodent's bones are some- :
what chewed up, apparently from Borhyena's molars, but the small animal had been only partially digested. : Dr. R. A. Stirton, who brought
says the fossil is an unusual one. Intestinal = remains are seldom found in a specimen, since fossilized animals were seldom covered up immediately and consequently the remains were widely Scattered.
The beast, the like of which has never been found either living or in the boneyards of ‘science, falls | within the genus technically known | as Borhyena. He was a carnivor-| ous marsupial, with the habits of a wolf or hyena. Opossums. and’ kangaroos are the types of marsupials surviving today. Borhyena's lunch was not dis-
Borhyena also Is unique in that all his pieces are already in place, and he doesn't have to fitted together like a jig-saw. Borhyena is one of 28 rare species brought back ‘to Berkeley by Dr Stirton. Only .three of the species have been reported by scientists before, Fe Dr. Stirton explains that norther:
the specimen to-Berkeley last year, |
covered by the scientists until the South America is almost unexstandstone that froze him in his plored so far as fossils are condying pose was carved away from cerned, and that because of the his bone structure. |long isolation of the continen: Where his intestines should have many animals developed unique
been was a rodent belonging to a characteristics not found elsewhere.
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