Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 March 1947 — Page 4

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"was a search for hidden weapons

— defense and the gallery laughed

~ The-state, 6 Seniad pressed home its point that no improper advances were made by state police toward the girls on their capture. Miss Ward said she realized it

‘and did not mean to convey any other impression to the court. “1 still don't like the idea of police putting handg on us, however,” She said,

" Expected Search

..Miss Hornback also had testified she had expected to be searched: .She asserted she did not know the trooper had been killed until State poljeg told her. on the way to Indi-

Miss Ward's eyes as she told of the cornfield capture. “I was sitting in a state police ‘ear when a trooper came up. He

was going to be nice to me.” he 1 paused, bit her lip and said: “Then he hauled off and popped me one.” The tear fell on her white blouse and she wiped back others with a twisted handkerchief.

Charged With Lying

Twice the state has charged wit nesses with lying as they sought to trap them in contradictions which would discredit their testimony. In

Bape a single tear fell from |

NATIONAL 24-HOUR -FORE"CAST SUMMARY: Rain is forecast for the South Atlantic and Gulf states, eastern and southern Tennessee ' and the coastal sections of Virginia tonight and early tomorrow. Snow is promised for a considerable part of the Ohio Valley. (Affected areas on the: Fotocast picture where this | precipitation will fall), Clear skies are promised for New England, New York, Michi-

Considerable cloudiness will per sist along the Pacific coast, over western Kansas and Nebraska, the south and middle Atlantic states, the Ohio Valley, Indiana, Illinois, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. (See cloudy areas inset chart for location of cloud areas). Showers are expected in California and portions of Missouri, Nevada, Washington and New Mexico. (See affected areas).

both instances Bartholomew County! Circuit Court Judge George ¥ Long has admonished the prosecu-| tion. - Heard yesterday, besides Miss Ward, were Johnson, his mother, Mrs. William Johnson, and Miss Hornback. Only once was the solemnity of the courtroom broken, * Then the judge, the state, the

heartily.Miss Ward was attempting to describe a state policeman present at dianapolis when the teenagers made their confessions. “He had a bald spot on the back of his head and he was real big,” she said. “I don’t | . . it's not that he’s so tall, “He's just spread out.”

DIES AT 106 CATES, Ind., March 19 (U, P).— John BullL«=id#6, died at his home near here today. He was born in 1840 in Bell county, Kentucky.

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Missouri Congressmen Query Truman

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Foreign Minister V.

in FOTOCAST a ACME TELEPHOTO

BUREAU. DEPT. of COMMERCE FORICAS ++ PERIOD ENDING 230AM EST 3-20 ©

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DAT WORTH

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Flurries of snow are pictured for North Dakota, Iowa, much of Minnesota and South Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas. Thundershowers will break out in New Mexico; Arizona and California. (See Fotocast).

It will be slightly cooler in Missouri and thé valleys of western Oregon. Somewhat warmer weather is promised southern Florida, North Carolina and the northern Plains. © Temperatures over the remainder of the country will be much the sante as experienced yesterday. The freezing line on the Fotocast is drawn through points

where lowest temperatures will be ay Kansas

32 tomorrow. It will drop still colder north of this line. Sample forecast minimum temperature readings include Boston 26; New York and Kansas City 30; Philadelphia and Washington 32; Atlanta 40; St. Louis 26;

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troit 20; Cleveland 28; Duluth 8; Ft. Worth 40; Los Angeles 50, and Seattle 44. ~~

Official Weather

UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU (All Data in Central Standard Time) March 19, 1947— Sunrise .... 581 | “3 “the 5:36 tation 34 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m...trace precipitation ame RB. 1.0000 3

The following table shows the tempera. re in other tities: tow

or

Chicago 25; Milwaukee and De-

Vishinsky's La

Tribute to Marshall . -

By R. H. SHACKFORD - United Press Staff Correspondent MOSCOW, March 19.— Soviet M. Molotov

(Continued From Page One)

and Poland. Terms of the compromise bill were not made public immediately. Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson will be the first witness. At the hearings beginning tomorrow, Mr. Acheson told a newsc conference . yesterday that any appreciable delay beyond March 31 in voting aid to Greece might be disastrous. . Ask Total Cost

faced an American challenge today to reveal what German scientific and industrial secrets the Russians

have learned. The was laid on the line by tary of State George,

C. Marshall. It was given during an exchange in which he scored his first clearcut negotiating victory over Mr. Molotoy—a Wétory so complete that Andrei V , Mr. Molotov’s deputy, laughed out loud at his superior’s plight. Secretary Marshall hoped that his challenging reply to Mr. Molotov in

The G. O. P. Missouri congressional -delegatien’s seven questions

Tings (D. Md.) who termed the or-

——| ganization * “impotent: ... ; am empty 4 shell.”

on the implications and conse-|t

ing today. Besides wanting to know whether!

United Nations, the delegatidn| asked that the President reveal: ONE: The total cost of the program to American taxpayers. , TWO:

f

when it serves their purpose?”

laying down: a general principle]

Afghanistan and India.

strike against Communism at

sive is to be waged in Greece and| Turkey. - Opinion Is Varied Congressional opinion on aid to!

Fla) for an emergency session of the Unitéd Nations general assembly, to & dirge by Senator Millard E. Tyd-

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Still others, ‘however, eres with President Truman that the United Nations were not prepared to handle | ‘the Near Eastern crisis. Among | these were Senate President Arthur] H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.) and Senator Tom Connally (D. Tex.).

“Deader Than a Mackerel” |

| Senator Edwin C. Johnson (D.| | Colo.) said the decision to by-pass {the United Nations put President [Truman and Senator Vandenberg in a position of teaming up “to de|stroy the dream pe call the United! Nations.”

| Johnson: said, “will “kill United Na(tions deader than a mackerel,” and {reduce the organization to a “shattered dream.” Senator “A. Willis Robertson (D. Va.) agreed with Senators Tydings | and Johnson,

| Outside UN Jurisdiction

Sis191%

| Senator Connally, who helped | write the United Nations charter, did not agree. He sald the United

quences of the Greek-Turkish aid|as “reparations” German .patents program were drawn up at a meet- and inventions worth $10 billion,

the program means risking war that on the question of taking Ger-

with Russia and abandoning the man reparations from current pro{duction the United States “will not

Potsdam to Yalta.”

that a secret reparations protocol | & “If we act outside the | signed at Yalta by the late PresiUnited Nations in this instance, | gent Roosevelt had been superseded will other countries do likewise ‘by the Potsdam agreement six| {months later. Britain agrees with THREE: Whether Mr. Truman is the United States in this matter.

The Proposed eA Senior)

yesterday's council session has put to rest permanently Soviet claims hat the United States has seized

Superseded, Marshall Says #is statement also made it clear

ollow Mr. Molotov in a retreat from

Secretary Marshall's position was

ES BES EMR EER ARL LEE YER Y

ugh Pays

among the greatest beneficiaries of German patents seized by the, United States. The United States made the German secrets it discovered available to the entire world in commerce department publications, the statement said Mr, Green wrote that the Soviets always claimed they had not found any such information in their zone. Secretary Marshall read a ’ passage in which Mr¥ Green said he| suspected the Soviets had taken) such information. He said he would appreciate “access to it on similar terms to which the Soviets are acquiring a mass of material released by this office.”

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In the protocol Mr. Roosevelt

which will govern' U. 8. policy else- agreed to taking some reparations where in the world, particularly in| {from current production. He also China, Poland, Finland, Iran, Iraq,! lagreed to use the Russian proposal | . |for a total of $20 billion reparaFOUR: Whether the United)tions. half of which should go to|

States should not discontinue aid | Russia, as a basis for further repato Russia and her satellites “and {rations negotiations. The Potsdam

declaration referred only to capital

home” if an anti-Communist offen- assets as reparations and did not | specify a sum.

Debate Patent Benefits The - American challenge to Mr.

Molotov developed when Mr. Molo- | Greece and Turkey ranged from |tov claimed that the United States | call by Senator Claude Pepper (D.|3lready had reaped $10 billion in|

reparations from Germany by seizing German patents and inventions. Secretary Marshall, angered, retorted by reading a letter. written Feb. 18 by John C. Green, director

(af. the. commerce department's of-!

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It was a request for Mr. Marshall to take yp with the Russians the possibility of having access to scientific and technological information taken from thé Soviet zone of Ger-| many, since the Russians had been

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