Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 December 1946 — Page 2

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RES aT re a Ee ri ; ! : : h : J L 2 Th : ~ re POLIS me —~ ms Loh ocd MONDAY, i : : * : : \ + ; k Guerr: Local Att Are Named Wabash Graduate ir k Guerrilla Band [85000 Cared for Five Local Attorneys Are Name Va cere iN gies wi CER ° By Stark Deputy Prosecutors W . — -|Gets Scholarship | SAYS: Willing to Trade By Wakeman Staff ®y Stark as Bepd y. Jrosqcurors Architect Head | reoorrox xs. ow 1 w vy . : ; P).—Frank R. Barnett, a graduate { By i . : ff to Be Cut Merritt Harrison, Indianapolis re! ; MEN J ; With the closing of Wakeman Sta : architect, today AsLme d his duties of Wabash college, Crawfordsville, H . S for Amnest . {Gemeral hospital! at Camp fer From 39 to 35 as new president of the Indiana Ind, today was named as one of bi e bury, 85,000 men and women War : Society of Architects. . [the 48 winners of a Rhodes schol- ', 1H : oh will’ have: been tremtad Prosecutor-elect Judson L. Stark Elected yesterday at the annual arship. {1 : : Ww casualtie Save | today named five local attorneys as convention at the Marott hotel | A world ‘war II veteran, Mr. Bar- | | Correspondent Learns Young Fighters Want col. paul M. Crawford, commanding deputy prosecutors for Marion Mr. Harrison succeeds Ralph O/|hett now is in Berkeley, Cal, doing || . : officer, sald today. : Yeager, Terre Haute. —- further study. Suspended during || British Troops Withdrawn, Free Elections Re A the cavualties have been |COURtY criminal and municipal Ois ew. offer are Gers Ihe Yar, hi ts ne fiat. time in I : : p— ty or civilian pur- [COUrts. : Brubaker, Elkhart, first vice presi-|Séven years the awar ave been | United Press Correspondent Robert Vermillion has returned safely jetimed 10 duty vith ann Criminal court assignees include |. ; dent: Theodore L. Steele, Indian- made. i Li to Athens after spending six days with the Andartes, or guerrillas |nacessitating permanent care were George H. Kistler and Jack C. j “i ; apolis, second vice president; Donald A of northern Greece. Mr. Vermillion and two other Americans were [gent to veterans administration Browne Es s jo y Jack Brown John Dailey Palmer Ward Donald Money |g. Compton, Indianapolis, secretary, Legislators Banquet I ae Coiba Yok ht pe poy oe tae sd £22250 2 nn vitor an tn comm fe cd a cnn 85, PS Al: oak ehegilod for Jam, 13 | | hill coun nor . . § wood Blue. Named | deputies, ’ | Also a world war II veteran, Mr. . i " is S Ie i directors are James M. of Louzestia when the Greek army attacked to “rescue” the Americans. |ihe SrgaIiations ailing to municipal court| Regarding the appointees, Mr. | Dailey was a member of the judge roew Sree ore The 150 state general assembly i By ROBERT VERMILLION LL id oor a lmer K. Brown is 4 world war II veteran|advocate general's department. A|Turner Hammond Sad TUORAL| members will be guests of the In- | | Wolied Prew Saft Corstapandent have sven oh and per- Ward® Donald R.|and a former member of the Baker native of Indianapolis, he lives at ** 5 0 "ue 70 "ep “Hamilton, | dianapolis Chamber of Commerce | ATHENS, Dec. 16 (U. P).—A shell fragment whined through a in prov 8 patients at Money and John |& Daniels law firm. He lives at 3021 Prospect st. Muncie, and Edwin C. Berendes, |/8n. 13 in the Slap hotel. It | h fie , ) 4714 Broadway. rm { marks the organization's biennial | av the left side of Apostolou Nasto's face. He an. H, Dalley. . . Evansville. . { Window ang HITReY BW Re Be Log ver the upen wound: Wakem — Other appoint-| Mr, Kistler is a member of Yaeger, & Ships: to Arrive Speaker at the convention was J, |legislative banquet. | » Three Americans were partially responsible for Apostolou Nasto's « a ments will be Linder, Tinder & Kistler law firm. In N Y Harbor Today Scott Williams, professor of design pRMERRSS of the banquet, accords... fi} i death. We had been reported missing in “bandit” territory and creek 2 Die in Plane Crash made later, Judge He recently wasigasociated with the . La at the University of Wyoming, who |n8 to C. E. Whitehill, chamber ah had come to the village of Louzestia to rescue us. LEBANON, Mo., Dec, 16 (U. P.). Stark said. All OPA as a litigation attorney. He| NEW YORK, Dec. 16 (U. P).—|i hare to supervise Christmas deco- | President, 1s to welcome the legiswe pre ohne though. |~ —A husband and wife crashed to George Kistler ointments will lives at 528 W. 43d st. Ship movements scheduled in New |.4¢jon5 on Monument Circle. lature to the city. Elected state | : in danger, the 54 villages under Andartes their death in an airplane tryingitotal about 35 deputies and .as-| A counter intelligence officer in| York harbor today: erin eigen itera officials also will be present. we weren any Beh, control a forced landing in a farm pasture sistants compared with the 39 cur- {the army, Mr. Ward is a graduate of | Arriving—Drottningholm, Gothen- GLAND SURGEON DIES Other guests will include wives or 1.1 . The three of us—John Phillips, There is a system of taxes to pro- east of here early yesterday. Au- rently listed on the $70,000 budget. Butler university ‘and Indiana uni-|burg; Santa Barbara, Valparaiso;| CHICAGO, Dec. 186 (U. P.).— husbands of legislators and wives J ba of Time and Lite magazines, Tom vide food and ammunition thorities said the dead were Arla|The plan is to provide larger versity school of law, He lives at|Ft. Townsend, Bermuda; Noordam, |Victor D. Lespinasse, pioneer in the of chamber members. i Plies, » Gresk-speaing New York er headquarters is a “rov-|Harrison, 52, and Grace Harrison, salaries in the lower brackets. [5010 Washington blvd. Rotterdam; Oregon, Le Havre; field of gland surgery, died in a hos-| The first such banquet was held pl avis, 358 1-jnd Oy tan |Ing” headquarters. Only the top|38, his wife. The personnel cut would involvel Mr. Money, 330 Grand ave, is a|Marine Tiger, San Juan. pital here Saturday. He was 68. [in 1045. ii courtyar: rs. UE re Tt oem ate = ome oh = { Jeep oa SE . frontier, officers know where it's to be estab- | = { lished at a given time. | Our purpose was to talk with the

Andartes, or leftist “bandits.” The jeep broke down and we had to go the rest of the way by muleback and on foot. The Andartes country comprises $4 villages and some 25,000 people in the mountainous badlands of northern Greece. The area is about 150 miles north of Athens, in northern Thessaly and Thrace. Mortar Shells Echo. The “Battle of Louzestia,” designed to “rescue” us, began the afternoon of Dec. 9. Greek army units waded across the swift-flowing Pinios river, which forms the boundary between government and guerrilla territory. They found the jeep and were told we had proceeded by mule-| back to Kastania, a village nine miles to the west, This they learned from the proprietor of -the inn. Instead of heading west, the army unit—of about 40 men— turned south toward Louzesia, about a mile and a half away. | We heard the fighting begin at 8 p. m. Fifty guerrillas opened fire on the advancing soldiers. The three of us were on a mountain top. The valley echoed with the ‘erunch of exploding mortar shells and rifle fire. One of the shells landed 40 yards

The Andartes I talked with listed these demands: ONE: A general amnesty “we can depend upon.” TWO: Withdrawal of British troops. THREE: Arrest of all former axis | collaborators. i FOUR: New “free” elections with | all parties, including the Com-| munists and other groups in the leftist coalition, taking part. | Most of these youths said they would trade all these demands for a real amnesty which’ would guar- | antee their freedom from future, arrest and allow them to retusg to their homes and families.

State AFL Pushes 10-Point Program

Indiana's state federation of labor today launched a 10-point legisla-| tive drive with the primary objec-| tive of overhauling the workmen's compensation act. The program was approved yes-| terday at the close of a two-day pre-legislative conference attended | by more than 300 A. F, of L. dele-| gates from over the state. The! group agreed to follow the lead of | federation President Carl Mullen,

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from Apostolou Nasto's home. He was standing at the window when the shell fragment struck him in the face, Greek Army Withdraws

is some five guerrilla population hills behind the town. except for a few' men building a coffin for Nasto and six women who were kneeling near his body. The guerrillas expected a second attack. The army troops had withdrawn after heavy fighting: “They were looking for you” a old woman said. “We are happy that you've come to talk to us and we want you to stay—but there are few here to talk to now and one who will talk no more.” Clashes like the one at Louzestia are almost daily occurrences in northern Greece—though not for the same reason. In northern Thessaly, just 54 miles west of Larissa, the entire area is streaked with human misery. There are no doctors. People are hungry most of the time. The Andartes, or “armed groups of the oppressed” as they call themselves, have taken over the territory.

&ll the “law” there is. Most Andartes Young

all this. - the government? . government won't give them? able now. Here's what I discovered ly religious. same reasons they fought then

according to their statements.

go home.

When reac Lousestia, wh assembly despite a current “anti- | Ne Hed 14 Becta. w jh labor” trend. During debate on the|

lines, about proposals to amend the workmen's of 270 had Heo the compensation law, Stanley Thorpe,

On Dec. 11 the village, was empty, log cabin on Fifth ave.”

Four Andartes leaders represent

1 wanted to find out the “why” of [anyone to engage in both fields, sup- | Why the Andartes fight port of the status quo in the exist- |

What it is they want that the

Apostolou Nasto's death makes this information seem pretty vaiu- At School 7 Wednesday

Most of the Andartes are young|st. will ™ present a Christmas eant men. They are Catholics and deep- at 1:45 p. m. Wednesday Me the

Most of them were members of the Elas leftist resistance move- terson, representing Joseph in a| ment during the German-Italian| Nativity scene; Mattie Coffey, Mary: | occupation. They fight now for the|Carlos Carter, James Kizzee and!

They sald they were driven to!Bonnie Kizzee, Doris Dillard, Mary

appearance of a defensive attitude in an all-out push for labor's pro-| gram. ; He said the entire program would | be urged upon the coming general,

Hammond attorney, sald the current law was as “out-of-date as a!

Advocate 3 Amendments Three principal amendments were advocated in a drive led by officials of the United Mine Workers. The amendments were: "ONE: Tha{ medical care under the law be extended until an in-| jured worker is able to resume his Job. There is a limit now of 120, days. | TWO: That no deductions be permitted in final settlement of compensation. THREE: That dependents of! workers suffering total disability receive aid until they are able to care for themselves. Other points in the 10-point program include a drive for a mini- | mum wage law at state level pro-| viding for 75 cents an hour, re- | newal of the old act forbidding women to work at night, oppositoin to local option, legalization of union | bargaining with state government, | backing for the direct primary, nonpartisan election of school boards, divorce of beer and liquor whole- | saling from politics by forbidding |

ing gross income tax law, ; Christmas Pageant Set .| Children of School 7, 748 Bates auditorium. | Participating will be Charles Pat- |

,| Phillip Ross, shepherds; Billy Bay-|

Others will be Joan Dillon, John Bowers, Ronnie Owen, Lois Cable,

who urged abandonment of any |-

singer, Frank Taylor and Harold Nearly all these “bandits” are|Constant, three wise men. ; homesick, but they are afraid to

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STRAUS! SAYS:

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prefer the guerrilla life, but most|and Donald Price. ot Shem are sick of being hungry| In charge of festivities will be . ' [Mrs. Faye Miller and Mrs, Ellen| Four leaders command the ap- Grubb, music; Mrs. Mary Allen, | proximately 500 armed Andartes in|dramatics: Mrs.

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