Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1946 — Page 5
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OLD CURMUDGEON HAS ‘RED’ WORRY
Ickes Doubly Aggravated When His Citizens’ Committee!
Gives Wallace
By LYLE United, Press 84
» WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—The Old Curmudgeon landed on his feet when he hounced angrily out of the Truman cabinet. But he finds the footing getting slippery today.
INDIANA U, WINS HOUSING RACE
Workers Are Completing Five Dormitories.
Times State Serviee BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Oct. §.— Indiana university's housing battle appeared to be won today as the opening date, Oct. 16 drew nearer. Students arriving early watched Round-the-clock workers finishing up five dormitories and even installing furniture. The university has met its housing @eadline and now it is up to the fesidents of Bloomington to furnish the 320 rooms still needed, Dean of Seu ents Raymond L. Shoemaker sald. y A city-wide appeal for these rooms is being made through newspapers, theaters, churches and the BloomChamber of Commerce. Relief Appears Here Meantime, relief in the university’s housing crisis had appeared on the Indianapolis cam-| Ppuses. Emergency housing -in the 4-H elub boys’ building at the Indiana state fairgrounds, tendered by Governor Gates, will not be needed for Medical, dental and law students in Indianapolis, it was announced by d. A. Franklin, university treasurer. Though not available until the! end of the tourist season Nov. 1, accommodations for 57 married students at Canyon inn at Me-
Cormick’s Creek state park, 14 miles | from Bloomington, were more than!
half applied for. Tomorrow night men students Mving in university residence halls will attend a required meeting and the school of music will
* aptitude tests to its new students.
Orientation to Start The regular five-day freshman orientation period will get under-
way Friday but former students will!
Bot begin registering until Oct. 1§. Enrollment of former students
- will be in the auditorium.
Activities at fraternities and sororities will get under way tomorrow with all chapters showing a DO per cent increase in membership | r pre-war high. ew housing facilities ready for use with the opening of the semester include the Cotfage Grove apartments, reconstructed barracks-type buildings from. the Bunker Hill naval air station, which will aceommogate 164 velerans and wives; Rogers Residence halls, which will! provide rooms for 698 single veterans in dormitory units moved to the campus from Bvansville and Walk- | erton, and for 420 single men in the three completed units of the seven unit cement brick permanent dormitories, and three of the eight former Bunker Hill dormitories! now under construction. Cafeteria to Open The last named strugtures, forming part of a group east of the Fraternity-Sorority quadrangle and north of Third st., have been des-
ignated as Smithwood halls and
will house 140 students each. The eompleted Smithwoeod buildings will be given over te the housing of women students. A new cafeteria with capacity for 1708 students will begin operation tomorrow evening. In pddition to the new housing structures completed and nearing eompletion, the university will furnish student housing in its permat men's and women's residence lis, the 300-traller village for sterans known a8 Woodlawn courts. Town House, which is the former Bloomington USO, foyr former sorority houses, Hillcrest trailer court for studeni-ewned trailers, and apartments for 200. veterans and wives at the Orane naval ammunition depot. Altogether the university will house more than #700 persons this year as compared to 1835 before the war.
PLAN FLIGHTS OVER BROWN COUNTY FAIR
Hoosierland’s greatest color spegtacle—Brown county can now be seen from the air. The Roscoe Turner Aeronautical Corp. at Weir Cook Municipal airport, announced today a special series of week-end flights over the entire Brown county ares. The sight-seeing flights are scheduled to take three-quarters of an hour and will be made Saturday and Sunday afternoons. During weekdays, special flights will be made by appointment.
ARMY FINDS MUSIC SHARPENS FIRING EYE
PT. BELVOIR, Va, Oct. 9 (U.| P.) ~The army is finding the bull's
eyes come easier with music. Recruits here are getting musical accompaniment with their target practice. The army says it has a} relaxing effect and sharpens the firing eye.
hl:
post-war |
‘Iago by coupling a reference to Mr.
TE TN
Warm “Backing. C. WILSON ?
afl Correspondent
Harold L. Ickes is having Independent Citizens Committee trouble. The I. C. C. is an organization the Communists claim to have set up for their own purposes. Mr. Ickes became -exeeutive chairman of the committee! last March, Over the protests of its executive Chairman, the I. C, C. is on record with a thumping indorsement of Henry A. Wallace's attack on the American plan for control of atomic | energy. By chance or otherwise, Mr. Wal. {lace’s objections to the control plan
Taras Downs
James €. Downs, Ohicago, na-tionally-known real estate éconemist, will speak at a luncheonmeeting of the Taciangpolia Real Estate board to be held tomorrsw 4 in the Claypool hotel. In 11 years of forecasting, many § of Mr. Downs predictions concerning the real estate market have proved 20 be accurate, He is seid to have warned of op Downs the 1988 economic recession and forecast in 1939 that rent control would come te the U. 8. E. W. Springer, board president, will have charge of the meeting. Mr. Downs. will be introduced hy Howard W. Fieber, vice president.
DECATUR HIGH GROUPS ELECT
have heen taken up by American Communists as something as hely as the Scriptures. This is doubly aggravating to Mr. Ickes. Not enly dogs he support the control plan which his erganisation bitterly disavows, but the Old Cur-
Howard Mills Is Named President of Band. Howard Mills of Decatur Central
mudgeon is one of the best Wallace haters in town. Colleagues, Not Friends | They were cabinet colleagues™in the Roosevelt and Truman administrations, but not friends. Mr. Wallace, a temperate man in all his habits, shocked his colleagues | on at least one occasion 10 years
Ickes with some cussing worthy of Cordell Hull. ~~ There having been little, if any, |improvement in the relations of the [two men, Mr. Ickes’ demand that his own organization explain its 'indorsement of Mr. Wallace's ideas lon the atom apparently was made with considerable fervor. In correspondence with Bernard M. Baruch, who helped draft the atomic control proposals, Mr. Walllace already has somewhat amended his earlier criticisms. Mr. Wallace originally contended that we were asking others—notably Russia—to make public all information on resources, and to cease ex|perimentation with stomic energy during discussion of control plans. U. 8. te Reveal Nothing We, meantime, would reveal noth[ime and continue to make atomic bombs. But Mr. Wallace now concedes {that no such limitation would be put on Russia or any other nation during the discussion ‘period. There is no recognition by Amerijan Communists or—so far—by the Independent Citizens Committee of this substantial amendment in Mr. Wallace's original indictment. If the committee refuses to recant or to explain more fully its posi{tion, it seems likely that Mr. Ickes will find his spot uncomfortable. His spot as executive chairman pays him a substantial sum. The Washington grapevine places the (figure at $25,000. But in response [to a direct question, Mr. Ickes wouldn't say more than it was substantial money. Some of Mr. Ickes’ long time {friends tried to persuade against the
| David Rellich, vice president;
|I. C. C. chairmanship when it was! offered last spring.
Told ‘Aims of I. C. C.
They told him thev thought the {outfit was a Communist-front operation.
|
In support of that argument they | offered the statement made in August, 1945, at the New York state convention of the Communist Pelitical association. June Hoffman, a member of We association, then said: “We built the Independent oitizens committee of arts, sciences and professions and it is a great pe-' litical weapon. The radio and film | propaganda ‘organizations can help] jour activities as Communists. We| can bring in the middle strata.” The capital knows Mr. Ickes is no! Communist. But it would be sur-| prised if his I. C. C. ever deviated
from the Communist party line. FRANCE OFFERS 2 LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y,, Oct. 9 (U. [P.).~France has proposed formally {that the ¥Prench African mandates in the Togoland and the Cameroons | be placed under United Nations trusteeship, with France as the sole trustee. The proposal made France the first country to offer to give the | United Ntgions soversignty over any | of its terirtory. The Prench proposal was present- | ed in the form of suggested trugteeship agreement under which the ! tories, mandated to France by League of Nations in 1919, would become subject ta the United Na-! tion's trusteeship program. They
were German colonies prior to the first world war,
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high school was named president of
{the school's band at a recent elec-
tion. Other officers named were snd Charlotte Cain, drum majorette. Baton twirlers will include Loretta Jones, majorette, and Barbara { Moore, Carolyn Yorger and Norma Reeve. Junior twirlers are Una Williams, Joyce Gropver, Jeannie Rhorer, and Bdith Anne Rharer. The band and choir are planning a party Saturday at the school. Members of the student council held their first meeting last week and discussed plans for a football dance and the freshman reception. Council members are John Seerley, Barbara Wright, Cecil Palmer, Alice Rosner, Phyllis Paddock, Bill Lucas, Charles Bailey and Ann Oldham. The junior class has resched a goal of $600 on magazine subscription sales and several class members will receive certificates of achievement for individual sales of more than $30, Grade Groups Elect PBighth grade students have organized clubs and one group known as “Cyclone Kids” has elected Bill Bals, president; Mary Bailey, vice president; Betty Lou Jones, secretary, and Geralding Gault, treasurer.
A second group which selected the name “The Willing and Able” elected Shirley West, president; Joyce Sparkman, vice ppesident, and Virginis Murphy, secretary-treasurer. Seventh grade members of the newly organized “Swing Shift Kids” club elected Ida Hider, president; Joyce Groover, vice president; Carol Adamson, secretary; Harold Fedderjohn, treasurer, and Virginia Evans, song lesder. A second group named Msrshall Moore, president; Mary Ann Shutte, vice president; Jane Macy, secretary, and Danny Travis, treasurgr. The %chool cheir, consisting of 82 members, has been under the supervision of Mary Hisabeth Fields, and is now preparing for the state choral festival.
CHIANG 1S 60 TODAY SHANGHAI, China, Oct. 9 (U. |P.) —~Generalissimo Chiang Kai{shek observed his 60th birthday to- | day, but Ching will not celebrate
officially until Oet. 31.
To Speak Here |
SEEK A-BOMB
In Chemical Warfare.
By Science Kprvicy WASHINGTON, Oct. 9. — The army Js not putting all the natienal defense eggs into the atom bomb basket. The search for new weapons in germ and gas warfare is eontinuing, Maj. Gen. Alden H. Waitt, chief of the chemical warfare service, declared at the meeting here of the District of Columbia Medical socfety. While doctors hope that atomic bomb by-products will help fight disease in the future, life-saving peace-time dividends have already been paid on the chemical corps’ investment in national defense research, Hope to Cure Cancer A cure for mercury and arsenic poisonings; control of the dreaded cattle plague, rinderpest; improved toxoid te fight bolulinus peisening in food; hope for a cure of cancerous diseases of the blood through nitrogent mustard gases; hope for better treatment of blinding glaucoma and the muscle weakness disease, myasthenia gravis through other chemical warfare agents; con. trol of weeds through the search for chemicals to destroy the Japanese rice crop are among the dividends Gen, Waitt reported. Germ weapons, he believes, have possibilities comparable to thg atomic bomb in war, He said that it is a great dis-serviee to national defense to say that germ warfare is not practical. Only through science, he de-
clared, can we reach the unity of |§
mankind necessary te win the But basic research in biological chemical warfare must continue both as preparation for sa possible next war and for the life-saving dividends this research can pay in peace.
SPOT FAINT COMET
IN SOUTHEAST SKIES
By Science Service CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Oct. 9.—
now visible in the southeast.
received at Harvard observatory from Dr. J. 8. Paraskevopoulos, superintendent of Harvard's southern astronomical station, the comet is
far top faint te be seen with the
naked eye or binoculars. The heavenly object may known as Comet Bester after its discoverer. Or it may be found te be the recurrent Comet Temple 2, scheduled to revisit the vicinity of the earth this fall. Calculations show Comet Temple,
the constellation of Cetus at this time.
and it may be that the planet pulled it slightly off its course. This
is found away from its predicted position.
- TRUMAN TO FLY HOME
Independence, Mo., home tp vote in the congressional elegtion Nov. §, the White House announced yes-
|terday,
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Army Continues Research |g
faint comet has been spotted in the constellation of Cetus, The Whale, E
According te sa cablegram just|g be lf
last seen in 1930, is due te be in|E
would account for the fact that it |S
WASHINGTON, Oct. § (U. P.).— President Truman will fly to his|E
NAPOLIS
The comet made a fairly|E close approach te Jupiter in 1943,|E
EE
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