Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 December 1946 — Page 15

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s the high Davis high 1 six-weeks 515 points, hel Hadley, y Kernodle,.

Perrott are points.

y Pruend, Ned

‘les Carpenter, Holdeman, Loall, Joyce May, atcher, Loretta , Jack Ayers, leman, Harold t Sedam, Bar-

Stewart Clark, .,

arvey, Dargang, Barbara Juanita... Ne

ied SURRTS, KathBrandt, Betty

iTlips, Henrietta Von White, Velma

Conklin, BarJack Pickerell, Savage, Dale a Williamson, eftich, LaVada ean Armburst, Blanch, Diane t Frelje, Dessie Kantner, Effie

and Jack Win-

the sponsory is filling a , needy fame toys to the

ooms of Ben planning a 1e seniors in

harge of the are being assmen to be

er the direcnm will sing anish on the

ratings have the Roscoe Gorp.: Solo, } N. Highland irold C. Linnd Robert E. , and instrumer, 3735 N.

THE “LITTLE GUY” gets a break at Brookside park now. : He's the one between the ages of 7 and 10. That is the in-between age where skill in sports begins to develop if a youngster is given a chance. : It was the Brookside Mothers’ Civic club that went to bat for them and got an hour a week of supervised play, There was some opposition to the idea. Several persons claimed there wouldn#% be any response. But the mothers were right. . After four weeks there are 70 registrations for the 3:30 to 4:30 p. m. hour; The older boys are not allowed in the gym at that time. The idea came about because the mothers saw the little fellows get pushed around. It wasn't that the older boys were downright mean. Not at all. It was just “they were too little and they can't play good enough.”

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"HEAD UP—LEGS STRAIGHT"—Instructor David Fahey gives a little more than moral support to Dick Moore (bottom) and Dale Jones in a

tumbling act,

res itcting % dumbling. His:

‘club, and Mrs. Charles E. Sanders, 1306 N. Oxford st.,

om @w

Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola | The Indianapolis Times

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Wallage Kreiger, 1341 N. LaSalle st, sopho-| SECOND “SECTION MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1946 + PAGE 15

more at Technical high school is instructor in bas-

ketball. He devotes his time free, At one end of the gym he had a free-for-all basketball game going. Thirty boys participated with spine-curdling gusto. One little fellow got his hands on the ball and tried to shoot. What happened could easily be judged a foul. Not only was he pushed from behind, but his arms were | grabbed, someone took a grip on his belt and gave | a yank and another opposition player threw a body block into him, © i There were screams of delight when the shot was blocked. In a split second someone else was getting | the same treatment. Wallace blew his whistle until] he was slightly blue in the face before the players stopped. Rules? You need few rules for high-spirited fun, All they need is a basketball,

ARGIRIAEL

Plan Christmas Party

ON THE OTHER side of the gym David Fahey, 1516 N. Temple st, junior at Technical high school, | arith 5. Mifibers” "Were working to get-on-the-team-which woud give a-show at the Christmas party Dec, 22, . , Dick Mooré, 10, and Dale Jones, 8, both of school 54, were sure they were going “to make the team.” Every bay in the gymnasium must participate in the activities or sit on the bench. Mrs. Raymond King, 5316 Brookville rd., president of the Mothers’

chairman of the organizing committee, keep their eyes open for boys who often stand in the middle of | the floor while they get their breaths. \ The danger in this was illustrated when a boy with the basketball, pursued by seven other whooping and yelling youngsters piled into a winded spectator. | Mrs, King's son, Donald, was—"somewhere on the

") od -

Asia and waterways of destiny

Expert on Russ. Joins |. U. Staff |

Turk Army Deploys | Troops to Defend = Dardanelles Straits

&

Twin Gateways to Asia Most Closely Guarded Areas in the World Today

By JOHN A. THALE Times Foreign Correspondent

IN THE DARDANELLES, Turkey, Dec. 16.—-Two innocent-appears

ing strips of water are among the most closely guarded areas in the world today.

or 3000 years, ; With international tension today centering again on these straits, fthe Turks reportedly have -one whole army corps occupying posis - tions along the Dardanelles, 3 - s Movements of © civilians and fors eign visitors withe in the vital area are strictly cone trolled by the Turkish high command, which has the power to overrule even

Dr. Ginsburg to Teach Russian Language |

Times State Service |

floor playing basketball,” Mrs. Sander's son, Charles, 4 : yy > > ‘ | BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Dec. 16.—| President Ismet could be seen more readily. He was just completing 8 | mm ee ee ets , 9 SNR lan AE en Mess ie Michael Ginsburg, Russian ex- ; Inonu as far as forward roll on the tumbling mat. { . : > 1 t in the U. 8. state department, | " matters affecting - pe ve, i urating new seven-minute tele- [pert in th | . Th Besides basketball and tumbling, the afternoon's 48-HOUR DANCE—The photograph above, naug q se m e 1e {has been appointed professor of | Mr. Thale the defense of

activities included boxing, wrestling and relay run-| photo transmission of pictures between Monterey, Mexico, and the U. ., shows

Russian language and civilization the Dardanelles are concerned.

ning. The latter event was getting under way. It| Matachinese Indians in their annual celebration of the anniversary of the miracle of |at Indiana university, President| The strict secrecy which veils

didn't make any difference what the game was—it was accompanied by the same amount of ear-piercing yells of encouragement to anyone who happened to be running

The Mothers’ club is making big plans for its 13th Closest of Truman's Advisers— annual Christmas party. There will be a Santa Claus

and gifts for everyone, tap dancing, tumbling, movids » ° an Christmas singing Clark Clifford Moves Into White House |

Last year. the mothers planned for 300 and 350 children came. This year theyre planning for 350

og A Spotlight as New 'Bright Young Man’

Virgin of Guadalupe, Mexico's patron saint. The traditional dance of the Matachinese

: ; lasts 48 hours.

Suckers: Fishy, H

s— . u —— . . " Urged President On effective speech on short notice at

inf a critical moment. UMaNn By Frederick C. Othman In Fight With Lewis

The story told of the more recent White House nreetings on coal beBy CHARLES T. LUCEY Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Only man who ever lured his government into comparing in print the intelligence of people with fish (humans come off second best) is Rex T. Stafford, Pittsburgh, Pa. When he is not playing tricks on fish, people and governments, Mr. Stafford is manager of the transformer division of the Allis-Chalme.s Manufacturing Co. Persuading the government to print a. treatise on suckers, both human and piscatorial, cost him a pretty sum. Bu} the results were worth it. ey made, history. No other joker ever achieved ¥such official success. The ‘wily. Mr. Stafford invented what he called an irresistible bass lure. He then went to the U. S. patent office—perhaps the” most dignified of all fetieral 'hureaus—and made formal application for a patent. In language as stiff as it is legalistic, he described his fish hook. Pa! : x 7 Lure to Many Suckers — bop <i i “IT HAS LONG been common knowledge that our modern bright lights have proven a lure to many suckers and other poor fish of the human variety and occasionally to persons of eminent respectability,” he began. : “I have devoted considerable attention tq reaclions of human beings under the lure of bright lights. As a result -I arrived at the definite conclusion that the initial luring effect on’ human beings—incident to the sudden perception of bright lighls—is appreciably stronger -than the. lure of persistent .brighf lights. I have applied the results of my studies to the ecapf ture of fish. I have found that these same degrees of lure exercised by bright lights on human beings are exercised not only on suckers and other poor fish in our streams, but also on respectable fish. , , . more particularly bass.” The straight-faceds Mr. Stafford went, on to describe’ the electric Mght inside his lure and how it

gins with the report of Secretary Krug to Mr. Truman of Mr, Lewis’ WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Clark threat to strike unless certain deflashed on and off with each jerk of the line, He Clifford is tall, blond, handsome, mands, including 54-hour pay for also submitted a handsome picture of himself about impressively competent and friend- 40 hours work, were granted. to be pulled out of a*boat by a bass four feet long, ly. He is married, the father of which had snapped at his submarine lamp. This three lovely daughters, and he will

Some close-in advisers suggested a half-way compromise. Messrs. he called Figure 1. be 40 on Christmas day. He is also the most rapidly rising

Krug and Clifford stood in vigorous young man in Washington. He is

opposition to this. Fight to a finish, they advised. The President currently perhaps the closest of all of President Truman's advisers, a

decided it that way. Mr, Clifford wise counselor whose position In

“Successful operation of the lure is illustrated in Pigure 1,” he explained. “The lure previously was cast upon the water by the fisherman and as intermittent pull’ was applied to the line (1), the lamp (5) and _the guide (7) were intermittenly moved against the bias of spring 9). so that contacts (10) and (12) were closed and light (5) illuminated.

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helped with the quarterbacking from then on. favor of a firm stand against John Believes in Democratic Party L. ‘Lewis was supported by Mr. Mr. Clifford's friends say he con(Truman. A skillful legal crafts- siders himself much more lawyer Bass Sees the Light {man, he is now engaged in the than political strategist. He sees considerable -task of winnowing " his job not as policy-making, but as “AS IS OBYIOUS in Figure 1, a magnificent bass bushels of bureaucratic barley to PRESIDENTIAL AID Clark implementing policy once it is made. saw, the light (5) through the transparent cap (6) COme up with the President's an- ford led {ss eT oar He objects to the heaping of credil and was irresistibly lured to the hook (3)." {nual state-of-the-union message. hore, Ce astest rlSING on Mr. Truman's advisers in a Mr. Stafford tifen detailed the workings of his| BriShi Young men have risen and young man of Washington. He's white House victory such as that hook. and summed up. hi§ description on line 45, thus: tumbled often in this town in re- busy now draiting state-of the. in the coal strike. He points out it “It is an irresistible bass ture substantially as shown | SER YEAS. The Moleys, Corcorans, Union message President Tru: is the President himself who in the

ibed “i ions ight | Berles and Bowleses have shone il “clutch” must make the decision. and “descr , with imitat i ! » man will send to congress. to oe the size or the fore A a rightly for their hour and receded. - : ’ Mr. Truman would have taken the that got away.” ' {So may Mr. Cliffotd. fand Lt. Cliffod didn't stay: in. that yap if strategy had failed; he should

But today he seems to have his spot long. He became assistant cet credit when it succeeded. polished shoes planted on the to Judge Samuel Rosenman, presi-| There has been criticism in reground, and he moves without the dential speech - writing holdover | cept months, especially since elecalmost hysterical haste and dra- from President Roosevelt's regime. (jo; day, that the President has matics of so many of his top-spot Increasingly important assignments ted away from the New Deal, predecessors. A Truman -circle were plunked on his desk and he ond sometimes blame is placed on

He accompanied this application with the standard fee. Thes patent examiners never had seen language quibé: like his in their perusals of millions of dry-as-dust. applications. Neither had they seen before an electrically lighted fish hook. They made careful search, but Mr. Stafford’s was the one and only, .

There wash’ much the patent office could do but inglofi, but he-came Without Tan- leaving the ga inies that he is reactionary and issue him a patent (No. 4.011,044). This involved [aT¢ Moved up because his repre Advised . Fight on Lewis doubts that he is conservative. Mr publishing #t= the “government printing office his card marks were mostly A-plus, | In the late afternoon of that Clifford thinks “that “Jeffersonian observations on suckers, as well as his engraving A Lawyer and a Good One hactic Friday in last May's brief Democrat” might come closest

describing him. : He believes in the Democratic called in Mr. Clifford and an- party, and that it, more than the

of himself in a battle for life with an electrically By trade, Clark Clifford is a nation-wide rail strike, Mr, Truman illumitiated bass. The federal printers never before lawyer and a good one, but he was weré called on for a job like this; they probably a navy lietenant on the staff of ER : wever will be again unless Mr. Stafford decides to Read Admiral Royal E. Ingersoll, nounced that he was going on the Republican party, will always be the do some more inventing. I hope. and stationed in San. Francisco, radio that night in a talk to .the P&rty of the peaple. when he was summoned to Wash- | people. : | Made Name With Ingersoll ington in mid-1945, His friend,| There would have to be a speech. Clark Clifford was born in

Science

~ Capt... J. K. Vardaman, newly ap- White House speeches often dre a Scott, Kan. while his father, a . pointed White. House naval aid, was |matter of days, rather than a few traveling auditor for the Missour! By David Di bound for the Potsdam conference hours. But Mr, Clifford, working Pacific railroad, was Stationed there. y Vavi lefz with President Truman and Lt.|with the President's ideas, got busy.| When he was four the family moved

A NEW KIND of world in which sounds become inaudible to the human ear and slow down to a speed of To-feet Ber second is being explored at the Sloane Physics Laboratory of Yale university. It is the world of absolute cold. Working with liquid helium, Dr. Cecil T. Lane and his colleagues, Dr. Lars Onsager and Dr. Henry A. Fairbank, have achieved femperatures® within onehundreth of a degree of absolute zero. 4 Absolute zero, a temperature of 273 degrees Bplow zero on the Centigrade scale or 459 degrees below zero on the Fahrenheit scale is the lowest possible temperature, For temperature is a measure of molecular vibration and at absolute zero all molecular vibration ceases. 5 Dr. Lane’s work is being carried on. in Yale's liquid helium plant, one of two similar plants in the United States, and is being financed by the office of naval research. 4 Iron and steel, subjected to the low tempepatures of this laboratory, become as brittle as glass ‘and shatter into a thousand splinters when struck with a hammer. r The same thing would happen to a research worker's finger were he so careless as to dip it into lquid helium and then bump it against a table or ‘chair.

Present Many Mysteries

LIQUID HELIUM, a colorless watery liquid, bubbles like champagne when exposed to the air and gives off a fine vapor or “steam.” The behavior of liquid helium presents many mysteries which the scientists have not been able to explain to date. One striking phenoiaenon is the affinity of liquid helium for itself,

_!Clifford was called in as temporary [Not on a typewriter or dictating to St. Louis, where he grew up, went naval. aid. {to a stenographer, but writing by |! public schools and was gradu- * When a small beaker of liquid helium is placed! Being: naval aid generally re- hand on a big tablet, “There’ wagiated Irom Washington university in above a larger container of the same substance, the duires more gold braid than genius, little time for revision. It was ena. ted to become a trial law i ,S§ - wanted to bec a trial lawhelium in the upper vessel “crawls” up the side of {rer and began accepting criminal the vessel and drops down into the lower one. [cases on court assignment where The new type of sound wave found in liquid helium | defendants had no funds for counby Dr. Lane has been named “second sound.” It oc-| sel. He became one of the ablest ae ih in elim which hay been cooled to within | {trial lawyers in Missouri, and in wo degress or less of absolute zero. |

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11938 became a partner in the St. Louis law firm of Lashly, Lashly, Miller & ClifTord. He volunteered for naval duty in 1943 and made a name for himself on Admiral Ingersoll's staff. After that, Washington. | Here he lives in a rented house {In which a pleasant dinner for friends always may be interrupted A by an emergency call from the J White House which takes him away for the evening. - His wife Marney coolly; notify the telephone operator | (for Margery) Kimball Clifford, is pli i {tall, blond and good-looking. He ) met her when both of them were touring Germany after their school days. Washington has given them quite a welcome. Taft Believes Aiken | Is Too Pro-Labor | Times Special | WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Back of the senate Republican row over chairmanship of the education and labor committee is belief that Senator George Aiken of Vermont is more pro-labor than Robert A. Taft of Ohio thinks the chairman of that committee ought to be. Senator Taft has his choice of

Sounds Become Inaudible

NORMAL SOUND waves travel through liquid| helium «with a speed of about 700 feet per second. But at the very low temperatures, the second type of wave with a speed of only one-tenth as much— 70 “feet per second—makes its appearance, i Though its frequencies are well within the range of the human ear, it is inaudible, How far the temperatures in this laboratory are

below the coldest weather encountered in the world | First note all woys out of your room If you suspect fire, act quickly but and location of exits on your Hoor

is spectacularly demonstrated by the fact that the] lowest temperatures ever recorded on the face of the earth was 68 degrees below zero Centigrade, This. temperature was recorded. in Siberia. (It is 110 degrees below zero on the Fahrenheit scale commonly used in this country.) Prof. Lane explains. that to date the Yale laboratory has been studying the behavior of liquid helium | at temperatures approaching absolute zero only as| a scientific problem. | No attempt has been made yet to extend the findings to practical applications. \ It is felt, however, that these studies will throw new lighy on the structure and behavior of matter and hence may have important applications to work in the field of electricity, the structure of alloys, atomic theory, etc, X

If door is cool, open it a bit; if the

| | " | Feel door, if hot, keep it closed and Moll seems safe, leave by known exit |

put wet towels or sheets over croc

A — I RR —— - . 50 finance committee, wihch revises o house tax laws, or labor committee We the Women By Ruth Millett Progressive Republicans are getting . J a giggle out of the fact that a — ——— a = {both Senator Aiken and Senator=-|

NEWS ITEM: “A deluge of publicity for Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark has whetted the British people's expectation that the handsome, 25-year-old court favorite soon would become engaged to Britain's Princess Elizabeth.” Well, that's the way American mothers set the stage for a daughter's prospective marriage, all right.

Mamma Is the Press Agent

JOE IS JUST another young man-—until it is obvious to mamma that he is going to lead her daughter to the altar, » Then mamma starts her publicly campaign. Joe is smart, up-and-coming, has a fine education, simply ADORES daughter, comes from a fine old family, ete, etc, | . So

» i Laat ton . ul \

We

No paid press-agent could do A better job than

elect Ralph Flanders, of presumably rock-ribbed, conservative Vermont, {are really liberal on labor,

{ Copyright, 1948, by The ind.anapolix Times | and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,

12,434,905 Civilians On U. S. Payroll

WASHINGTON, Dec, 16 (U. P.).— | The civil “service commission re[ported today that there . were 12,434,905 civilians on the government payroll on Oct. 31, a decrease of 34,094 during the month. Of the total, 2118984 were em-

mamma ; of making her daughter's future husband | appear an outstanding “catch.” In her zeal to sell Joe to her friends, mamma lets herself go in giving Joe the old build-up. It's easier, of course, if Joe lives in another town, In.such a case mamma isn't hampered too much by | her friends’ personal estimates of Joe,’ i

Human Nature the Same

BUT EVEN if he is a local boy, she can.do a good . . jab of, pointing up his good qualities and making him | * Don’t jump or take foolish chances to seem Jjke the season's prize altar prospect. | flee room, you may be safer there 80 the British are probably right in suspecting ' . ails | royal romance if praises are being sung in Britain for | DON'T LOSE YOUR HEAD—Panic results in the death of alan eligible young man. 4 ny : . i Human nature is the same the world over. And| lllustrated above are simple, dpmmon-sense rules, comptled by the | united states. Oct, 31 employment

Cr Jae (© If there's much smoke, hold or tie wet cloth on foce ond crowl to exit

every proud mother of a daughter wants everyone national safety council, that will minimize danger if you are caught |in Washington, D. C. was 224,743, aking a fine marriage. by fire in a hotel, apartment or other large building. . Ia decrease of 1119 for the month,

to think her girl is m . » ory J at wt aa j Eg 5 » 5 ~ us I } . e 7 Y ; ng

Srl i mal 3 ie - LR Sin «A : * - ; ’ i) , ] \ ; . !

friendship brought him to Wash-. stayed on at the White House after mr Clifford. But Mr, Clifford de- |

' Jenner, Jack Fye and Jim Drew. |

|

most. as many people in hotel fires as do the flames themselves. |jioved ~ within the continentals

Herman B. Wells announced today, location of troops and extent of

The appointment of Dr. Ginsburg fortifications around the straits is

will become effective next Septem- in contrast today to the relaxed ber. Since 1943, he has been on peace-time vigilance kept over other leave of absence from the Univer- international waterways. such as sity of Nebraska. the Suez and Panama canals.

He was a wartime air corps offi-| The difference here is that vire

cer. At present, he is chief of the tually there is never peace for the

internal political section, U, 8. 8. R. Turkish straits. division of the state department's! The two. passageways which toe research and intelligenée division, jgeuher make up the straits are like Dr. Joshi Joins Faculty [oR Subts Stuck 3 Sppocite ents Widely known as a scholar in the i e walermelon

1 uages and civilization of east is the Sea of Marmora, anguages °" | “From th ; v ern Euhope, he i§ a former Gug- m the ancient and cosmopoli

genheim fellow |tan city of Istanbul, the narrow . } { Bosporous stretches 17 miles to tap President Wells announced also the Black sea. ; the appointment of Dr. Sunder At the other end

ES rive {of the Sea of Marmora the Dare Joshi, former University of Chicago | 4. 1 elles straits ead oul in a 34 faculty member, as assistant pro-

h {mile passagewa - fessor in the adult aducation- di- rane passageway to the Mediter vision. ranean.

Resignations approved by the| Mine Net at Mouth * university's board of trustees were’ Small villages, wharfs, piers, dry those of Ben W. Miller, physical docks, warehouses and an occasional education; Cedric C, Cummins, In- swank beach club line the Bose dianapolis extension center; Clark porous thickly on the European side. Eméry, English; W. D. Gilllam, Pt.On the less settled Asiatic side, the Wayne and South. Bend extension hills are bare and brown. centers; Edgar L. Yeager, psychol-| At the Black sea mouth of the ogy; Francis B. McIntyre, econom- Bosporous a mine net-—-one of the ics; K. G, Wakim, physiology, and straits’ few visible defenses—swings H. F. Bohnenblust, mathematics, on bobbing buoys, The Dardanelles, had they been

. * floss strategically located along the Ri g Christmas {world's sea lanes, might have been | just another major inland waters ’ way. They look much like one. i But even a fy is just yesProoram Is Set [eon S75" a | straits, ‘and there's a blood spot on {| A Broad Ripple high school | almost every page. Christmas program will be pre-| For most of their 34-mile length lsented Wednesday in the auditor- the Dardanelles are from three to lium. Draclu, high school dramatic four miles wide. At one point they |club, and other student organiza- | NAITO down to less than a nile. {tions will participate. Miss Ruth Russia's Drive Not New | Carter, general chairman, will Pel agigt chroyded hills rising up to assisted by Mrs. Donnna Leigh Col-| 65,1 1000 feet high roll back from lins, Owen: Beckley, Howard Hans-|,;,, shore, The hills hide the gun ‘com, Roger Riley and Virgil Clark.| op, 10cements, the fortresses and Students who are helping with the|y,. oi qe1ds beyond, from which stage decorations are Shirley Elder, yo tending planes could rise in Joannce Hines, Bonnie Hurd, Ted ya ms to shower destruction on

fany attacking fleet trapped and un-

A Christmas dance will be spon- able to maneuver in the narrow sored Thursday by the Riparian, confines of the Dardanelles channel,

Broad Ripple high school weekly, Russia's current power drive for a under the direction of Miss Rose- Share in the control of the strategic mary Haviland. Roger Hancock, Straits is nothing new. . Since it general chairman, will be assisted lost its hold 200 years ago on that by Jean Greenburg, tickets; Martha Passage that blocks its outlet to the Wilson, decorations; Nancy Pippen- | Mediterranean, Russian leaders ger, publicity, and Jack Rule, and have been scheming and planning Philip Nicholas, refreshments. fon how to get it back. : mie _ And to keep Russia from reaching | Christmas parties are being the Dardanelles has been a key=|planned by the Latin and Spanish stone of Anglo-French policy for clubs today and tdmorrow, re-| nearly a century, spectively, in the school cafeteria.| Twice in the last 113 years British Committees for the Latrin club are intervention has saved Turkey from Joan ' Geisenndorff, refreshments; its powerful Black sea neighbor. In Susan Bassett, program, :Lolitd|1833 Brifain helped keep Turkey Washmuth will give an account of from becoming a Russian vassal the Safurnalia. Committees for the state, while in the middle of the Spanish , club - party are Audrey same century British and French Thomas, Margie McLean and Royce armies fought side by side with the Meranda, refreshments, and Jack Turks in the Crimean war against Langston, Elaine Zaring and Dick Russia.

Pearson, entertainment. { Copyright. 1946, by The Indianapolis Times | and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,

Visiting Scientists Labor Directive May Become Citizens |... od for Youths Times Special WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.—Most of | Employers covered by the U. 8, those German top scientists and | fair labor standards act were ree technicians brought here by the minded today not to use minors army and navy since V-E ‘day are under 18 as elevator operators, likely to become U. 8. citizens and! The U, 8. labor department also . | remain. [prohibits anyone in this age group | There are nearly 1000 of them. from riding en a freight eélevator, | If we don't make it attractive for An edrlier order makes it illegal to |them the Russians will be hiring employ persons under 18 as truck | them. drivers or helpers.

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SILLY NOTIONS By Palumbo

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to "Must be the surprise ending sveryons. is talking about,” © °