Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1946 — Page 33
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| FRIDAY, DEC. 6, 1946
DIMES FOR THE MILE—Wilbur Bohne, Firemen's post 42, American Legion, accepts the opening contributions in The Times Mile-O-Dimes from the Wild triplets.
With their parents, Mr. and
FIRST TRIP TQ TOWN-—The police department and the Red Cross joined forces
Mrs. Floyd Wild, are (left to right) Jean, Joan and Jane.
| posals for channeling atomic energy
THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES Russia Given | 19 Days. to OK Atomic Plan
Disarmament Hopes Spurred by Harmony
By ROBERT J. MANNING Unifed Press Staff Correspondent LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Dec. 6.— The United States sought more promises from Russia today in the fleld of disarmament and atomic controls. ‘ . It again put the American atomic plan on a take- it-or-leave-it basis. The United States has in effect given Russia about 15 days to say whether its recent display of conciliation means outright Russian] approval of the entire Americi®
NEW AMBASSADOR— Named U. S. Ambassador to
Ford Lays OF | 20000 Workers
auto industry shifted into low gear). nia this week-end, Other suptoday as a nationwide freight em-|plier concerns planned similar lay bargo induced by the coal strike took effect,
which operations last night and sent 20,1000 workers home
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auto companies’ supplies and their | means of delivéring finished cars. General Motors Corp. expected its | country-wide industrial network to ' {collapse within a few days. Its 263,000 production workers ‘faced .idle~ ness,
: . «fs. | Chrysler Corp. and other auto Auto Industry Shifts imakers were expected to be hit
2-9 | quickly, : Into Low Gear Budd Mfg. Co. planned to Tay off e aw between 12,000 and. 14,000 of its 2°,DETROIT, Dec. 8 “(U. P.)—The|;,," Diovees in Detroit and Phila~
offs.
Finnish Composer Dies HANCOCK, Mich., Dec. 6 (U. P.), ~—Martti Nisonen, Fnnish-born composer and leading musical authority of the upper peninsula, died late yesterday after a four-month
First hit was Ford Motor Co, suspended manufacturing
until further notice, Ford planned to coptinue final assembly at some plants for a few days until current supplies are ex-
Will Leave U.S.
NEW YORK, N. Y,, Dec, 6.—Carl © Milles, Sweden's greatest contribution. to sculptoring; plans soon to leave the United States and live out his days in Lidingoe, an island just outside Stockholm. 2 Now in his 70's, the famed seulp-.
toring at Oranbrcok, Mich, And it may mean he will relinquish his acquired American citizenship, pl
the Court of St. James is O. |nausted. After that 85000 em. \ness. Mr. Nisonen headed for 35 lean squares and halls. HYS Max Gardner, 64, under secre- |pjoyees will be out of work. years the music department at|“Orpheus,” outside the concert hall ** tary of the treasury and a for | Eventual layoffs in the auto in-|Suomi college, only Finnish institu- jon Kungsgatan, Stockholm, 1smer governor of North Caro. |dustry were expected to reach 500.-|tion of higher learning in the world-famous. io sump lina. 000 as the rail embargo shuts off thel United States. + | Copyri PL 18, by The Indianapa 4. ;
atomic plan. | The deadline has been set in problem into its most important the United Nations atomic energy|stage. The vote on this report is commission. The commission has! expected about Dec. 20. been asked to vote on the American! The three major elements of the atomic propasals by Dec. 20. Iplan, as described by Mr. Baruch, The disarmament subcommittee are: was spurred by the harmony which | “ONE: The erection of an intermarked its initial meeting yester-|,.ijonal authority which shall efday. | fectively prevent the manufacture The harmony was further demon-|,n4 yse of atomic bombs for war strated today when Soviet FOreign|,yrpoces, and which shall develop Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov ihe use of atomic energy for social readily agreed to American pro-| gain (So far the Russians have not into beneficial uses as well as ban-| agreed to the proposed authority, ning its use for war-like purposes. | although they have proposed, them The committee was working to- selves that twin atomic and disday on the second part of the reso- armament control agencies be set lution by which the 54 United Na-|up to abolish military uses of atomic tions hope to hand the security|energy.) council the most important direc-| “TWO: The right of free and tive it ever will receive—an order | full international inspection in supto set up actual machinery for | port of these purposes.” scrapping. not only dtomic bombs,| (In proposing the inspection agenbut most of the world's arms and! cies to the assembly recently, Mr. armies, | Molotov was interpreted as meanThe section deals with the ques-|ing that Russia accepts the necestion of atomic energy. The views of |sity for international control. But Russia and the United States on in the past Russia has talked of how it should be controlled—were | international control through namiles apart until Soviet Foreign] tional agencies, a procedure which Minister Molotov announced this | would not meet American demands.) week that Russia espouses two prin-| “THREE: The definite agree-
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to escort the triplets into the city. Ready for the journey are (left to right) Police Chief Jesse McMurtry, Floyd Wild and Jean, Mrs. Nettie McCarthy and Joan, Mrs. Wild and Jane, ‘Miss Norma Parish, Mrs. Russell Herr, Judith Ann Herr and Mrs.
John Beatty, Red Cross.
American Films in Mexico Counteract Anti-U.S. Propaganda, Spurs Literacy
Entire Population in Town Turns Out to Watch
Educational Movies
By JEANNE BELLAMY
Times Foreign
SAN ANDRES, Mexigg, Dec. 6.—The crescent moon looked down on [ence that it. was about io see a|%f strange doings in the churchyard of San Andres. Its light silhouetted the cone-shaped mountains all around. beamed dimly on the cobbled pavement of the town's only street, walled | co-operation with the Mexican de-|2tomic development authority. The by low rock huts without windows, dark and silent. Lamplight flickered partment of public education.
“Esteemed friends of San Andres,” he began. The fireworks continued, punctuating his talk with loud bangs and flashes of light. Undaunted, he informed the audi-
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ciples on which the United States|ment that once a treaty becomes has insisted since last June, | effective, providing for deterrents One was a renunciation by the 28ainst’ offenses and punishments |Big Five of their security council|for offenders, there can be no veto ‘right of veto in the field of enforce-|to protect willful violators, or to | ment of atomic and disarmament | hamper the operations of the interregulations. national authority.” The second was an apparent ac-| MT. Molotov announnced Wednesceptance by Russia of the principle | day—in what one American called that there must be international ‘the most important turn since the control and inspection to prevent signing of the UN charter itself” violations of whatever atomic and|that Russia was against the use of disarmament regulations the se- [the big power veto in the actual opcurity council devises. eration of the disarmament and
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Mr. Molotov's attitude today did | atomic control machinery.”
not represent acceptance of the American plan for a world atomic authority. Ask Russ Opinion . Bernard M. Baruch, 76-year-old
chief American delegate to the atomic energy commission, made {known last night that he takes these two Russian concessions to mean that Russia also espouses the rest the so-called Baruch plan. e thus invited the Russians to show their hand on the proposed
| United States wants this as the core
through a single open doorway, that of the town store. Two dozen barefoot boys scurried around a truck, ‘ no
| representative of that department,|¢f the world atomic program—with lhe praised the U. S. for this help | Power for the authority to control,
parked beside the church. The churchbell started clanging. | A stoop-shouldered man, called the professor, told the boys to] bring a bench. “For the ladies!” | Two dozen blanket-swathed wom-
en, some carrying babies, glided for-,
ward and sat down. Men emerged from the shadows to lean against the cemetery wall. They wore wide-brimmed hats and wool]
blankets were draped across their|and exhorted his listeners: to learn shoulders to read and write. ! ; “The first film, will be “The Human Behind the wall, rockets began| gu 4p by Walt Disney” he conshooting skyward. Like single-shot, c1,4ed,
Roman candles, they swished above | The fireworks ceased. Color
the church tower and exploded with{movies appeared on the screen. An| {a bang, echoing against the moun- amplifier atop the cemetery wall
tains. { brought the voice of the Hollywood The professor picked up a micro- narrator, in Spanish, telling the phone. story of the picture.
Reflected light from the screen
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{shone on the upturned faces of 200 | boys massed directly below it. Dozens of women stood around those on the bench. Indistinct in the shadows | behind the projector, men lined the | top of the cemetery wall, stood, or squatted on the ground. Nearly 500 men, women and children—most of
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| ——| Andres’ population—had turned
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entitled “Hookworm,” who with his whole family wilted and lolled on the porch of their thatched hut. { Hookworms from filth on the ground { had entered through their bare feet, | fastened onto the walls of their in- | testines and sapped the vitality of {| Pancho and his whole family, explained the voice from the sound track,
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Happy Ending A giant, friendly hand pushed Pancho into a clinic where he swallowed a pill. Flexing his muscles, he put on shoes, whooshed home and built a simple, model outhouse —something yet unknown in many rural Mexican communities, The happy ending showed the whole family, healthy and smiling, hoeing cabbages in their garden, Similar free movies are being shown throughout Mexico. In one month recently, 2300 showings reached more than 1600000 of Mexico's 20,000,000 people. The project was started during the war, throughout Latin America, to counteract anti-United States propaganda by presenting accurate pictures of life in the United States. Many of the films explain modern techniques of farming; cattle raising, health and sanitation. During the past year, several de-
$250.00 partments of the Mexican govern- . ment have started using the Ili$1 50.00 Gorgeous Be brary of 400 films and 47 projectors. $75.00 5-Dismond diamond en - The ree Shows gi crowds for ral- : : gagement ring. es spur ‘the literary campaign, Diamong sol. fine > . par for clinics in drives against tubergoid mounting. culosis and veneral disease,
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Films also are shown at universities, schools, churches, recreation centers — anywhere they are requested, : Copyright, 1046, by The Indienapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
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and to send inspectors into every corner of the globe and to supervise atomic operations, Warning that “to delay may be to die,” Mr. Baruch formally proposed that the atomic commission’ wrap |into its forthcoming report to the United Nations security council the entire American atomic plan—an act which would require Russia to vote on the over all Baruch plan and which would push the atomic
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tor has confided this intention to; ‘friends, following his first visit to’ ts Sweden in many years. That means he will wind up his school of sculp- .
Scores of his statues ado'n Amer« °
ry ee
