Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 June 1947 — Page 5

1 a six-mon

term

m. 34, Goodrich walked

a work detail, ld | dismissed

the the

. and gave state istody of Goodrich,

GETS DEGREE N, June 3 (U, P).— t Arthur H. Vann awarded an honlaws degree from

sity here,

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is grand of bright hat wash 7. Choose rtment of ~ color in y piece is

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MAIL OR PHONE (RI-9441) ORDERS FILLED

I E

fact that he was in the At that

17 miles per hour EE won.

That's why I told the pitmen to give; Holland the “Egy” signal. he was ‘still riding faster than 117 miles ~per hour. I told them to give him the “Easy” signal again so we could Set Bim down io the 117.miles per hour.

After the first “Bay” signhl

HOWEVER, Holland dropped his speed sidderly aie by the time We had figured his average at 114 miles per hour, Rose had passed

Holland and had taken the lead,

Once Rose was in the lead—through no fault of mine or the pit erew—it would have been foolish for

and pass Rose.

Rose also is a smart “driver and he would

I WAS the oY one responsible for the sale piven from my

pits. 'T told the pitmen not to give team should drive some positively

policy of the pops.

had no thought

ce drove came

5 11 i Bets}

ut that boy.” when Bill was here

bs

year

In 33 FEF gi =

“ 3 / AS FOR my future plans, I expect to return to California within -# few. days and immediately start plans for another try at the In-

Sianupslis Speedway. I expect to have the same two sand Mauri Rose as the drivers, -

~. (Continued From Page ‘One) "two-man battle. ouldnt lord. & wreck, for 1 bad everything ing 1 borrow ted Wp Inthe car

. » BECAUSE my financial investient in the aT ves 80 great I sell half interest, in the team before the race. Of course, now ve finished first and second there isn't enough money the country to Ar all or any part interest in them. They are still ny automobiles and will continue to be my cars, Holland ‘was riding ‘about 120 or 131 Ye per hour despite the’ lead and Tad a good margin on the fleld. J speed there was a greater possibility of Holland going into a bad slide and havihg a oh I figured thes at still could have stayed ahead of Rose and

There was the possibility, too, that the drivers might have been injured, perhaps fatally.

give. As owner of the cars and am experienced enough in the Indianapolis race to

Inexperienced men in my pit working for me. that some people thought I might signal to come over the finish line in a “dead heat.”

such a thing. That would be contrary to A. A. A. contest and I always make every attempt to observe all rules and

» REGARD ~ Bill Holland—and Mauri Rose, too—is of the Since Bill is a newcomer to the Indianapolis Speedway, I want a fine race and he has a wonderful future in the 500. to' my notice in 1041 when I‘'was one of the operators at the Indiana fairgrounds. When I saw Bill drive d my wife: “There is a great race driver. You're going

asked Cliff Bergere, who was my driver, to retire so I could,

me to signal Holland to go out

then have engaged in a both cars would have

the drivers any signals except those pit manager I feel for the best interests of everyone.

of this “dead heat” strategy nor

trying to et a ear to drive inthe

cars in my team, with Bill Holland

Case Histories Emphasize

Need for Sex

(Continued From Page One) der similar psychiatrie treatment now. Me was at once recognized as a mentally maladjusted child because the articles he stole had no monetary value, _ They were bits of old, worn-out clothing, personal trinkets representing only sentimental attachments of other people—strangers. Juvenile court consultants say the thefts unmistakably are the symptoms of serious maladjustments, dating back to childhood. They say they eventually wil find where the child's education on sex mat was either distorted or that he any at all, They are sure they will find a * period in his life where his normal physical impulses were diverted from affection for human beings to inanimate things that have become his fetish as the “love object.” Unless corrected by lengthy paychiatric treatment or institu- - tlondl ‘care, juvenile court consultants predict the child wil grow

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worse and become the most dangerous of all persons—the psychopathic sexual prevert. ” Countless crime records show that this type eventually develops a feeling of “no guilt at all” after|s suffering from an early “anxiety complex” for several. years over fears generated by distortion of sexua] attitudes in childhood.

(Next: Solutions offered on the Somplex subject of sewal educa-

Solos Feature Jordan Concert

By HENRY BUTLER Student soloists were featured in last night's Jordan conservatory concert at Kirshbaum center. The Jordan Symphony orchestra, Victor Kolar directing, opened last night's program with the RameauMottl “Ballet Suite,” best known for its often-transcribed “Tambourin.” In that suite, the orchestra was more effective than in the later accompaniments, where volume piled up and often drowned the soloists. First soloist was Lloyd Patten, tenor and Jordan graduate student, who sang the “Salut! demeure chaste” from Gounod’s “Faust” with skill and musicianship. He was folowed by James Bowers, trombonist, who played with the orchestra his own 'transcription of Wagner's “Traeume.” Handicapped by an inadequate piano, Miss Wilma Byfield, the next soloist, had to work ‘doubly fard in the first movement of .Schumann’s A minor piano concerto. Mr. Kolar and the orchestra continued with the “Dinki Suite,” by William Pelz of the Jordan. faculty. Light, engaging and easily understood, the suite pleased last night's audience.

soloists was Earl Albertson, baritone, who had power enough to be heard above the orchestra in the “Ella glammai m’amo” from Verdi's “Don | Carlos.” Following the “Fantasia andl Menuetto from Grand Quintetto, Op. 31” of Weber, played by Miss Marymae Stamper, clarinetist, with string quartet, Miss Billie Cole, soprano, was the evening's final soloist. : Miss Cole sang “Du Christ avec ardeur (La Mort de Jeanne d'Arc)” by Bemberg. Mr, Kolar and the orchestra con-

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NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORECAST SUMMARY: Cool northerly winds flowing around the high pressure cell over the lakes region will cause clear to partly cloudy skies bver most of the states east of the Mississippi tonight and early tomorrow, Weather bureau forecasters say. Thun. dershowers are expected in south. ern Florida while scattered showers will occur along the South Carolina coast. Early morning temperatures will be 10 to 15 degrees cooler from Maine to Pennsylvania cool, Canadian air flows in 5. hing, the standing front along the east coast. (See air flow and cool alr mass arrows.) Showers and thunderstorms are the outlook from Minnesota to Missouri and westward through the northern and central Rockies to the Pacific. (Affected areas

WEATHER Li oReviEw ot us. wiaTHER id fwd}

v.M Ree. MATS \ 4 COPE. 1967 £OW. L.A. WAGHER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

MOWNSVILLE®

picture where stormy weather will during the next 24 hours.) Partly cloudy skies are predict ed for most of the U. 8. Cloudy weather will be limited to western Montana. Starry skies will be visible from Maine to Virginia and over Arizona a nd southern California. (See inet map). Fog will form. along the coastline of southern California as cool air moves inland from the Pacific. There is an absence of storms over the eastern third of the nation. Cool, Canadian air is flow ing over this area while the warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico is now moving out over the Atlantic. Lowest temperatures predicted for the nation’s cities include Milwaukee, Detroit and Duluth 48, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland and Bismarck 50, Boston, Washington and Chicago 53, St.

5

peas; Bo ther CE

fa pR

ron ut pis

Louis and Kansas City 60, Atlanta .62, Memphis 65 and Ft Worth 70 degrees.

Official Weather

A wi BUREAU UNITED Re NADER

tation i’ Fspiston he. 2 since an, 1 Werear since Jan

sre

nM ly tne following awe shows the Temperatu

re in other ¢!

High Low AANA ......ceviilinnnriiainies a BOSION ....ii0pnessinssone 63 Chicago . 43 Cincinnati . 51 Cleveland , 50 Denver .... 80 49 pranville 3 4 , Syne i or ity)” : 8 In napa) is (e v . Kansas - 80 Los Angeies . 5% Miami . 83 5 Minnea lis-8t. Paul. . 8 50 New Orleans ......... . 90 5 New Yor eine . 18 61 Oklahoma ony. ' . 84 62 Omaha ena sns nner 71 56 BISOUPEN = ecrezvnses tre aesr- i: 48 Ban Antonio 93 kil an Francisco 87 55 LL SRO ana 68 50 of hy PLC. anions viinin 82 70

Cleanups Plus

(Continued From Page One) tered food wastes and general filth, Casualties due to diarrhea and the, dysenteries ran high. Y When the carrier-based planes] gave Okinawa its first taste of American bombing, every sixth plane laid down a blanket of DDT spray. The same was done before the landing at Iwo Jima. Result:| Instead of the expected 10,000 or more cases of diarrhea and dysentery, there were barely 100, . Nuisance on Bikini Flies were a terrible nuisance during the early work on Bikini, in preparation for the atom-bomb tests last yéar. A general airplane treatment with DDT reduced their numbers to insignificance. (As an interesting. side-note on the spread of civilisation, the brownskinned natives of Bikini, removed to another atoll for safety, had only two requests to make in response to a later inquiry: They wanted toilet paper and some more DDT.) Wholesale spraying or dusting of American cities from airplanes, to get rid of flies, is not considered either necessary or desirable by most scientists, Entomologists in the U. S. department of agriculture, in especial, are against it partly because of its wastefulness (DDT isn’t cheap), partly because of the harm it might do to bees and other beneficial insects. They say this is an opera-

planes. Won't Harm Bees

The use of DDT in Indianapolis’ campaign Will harm no bees or other useful insects, because the DDT will be sprayed and brushed where flies go but bees do not. It may knock off a few hdusecentipedes or spiders, which do have a useful role as enemies of flies. But since most housewives, have a squirmy dislike for these many legged creatures their loss can be taken philosophically. They're going to lose their jobs, anyway, with the disappearance of flies.

tion for the ground forces, ho for | 5

DDT Spray

Rid Entire Cities of Flies

Neither will DDT harm songbirds, since very few of them are flyeaters. Moreover, songbirds are ./usually not found in neighborhoods where flies’ congregate—and where they will die this summer,

(Tomorrow: How We Got DDT).

State Official Laud War Against Fiies

(Continued From, Page One) Thone, Times Science Service AntiFly editor, in his series of exchaive, copyrighted articles. DDT can be sprayed or painted on & surface.

The: for housewives to start, Mr, aoe urged, is at the family garbage can. .DDT should be] sprayed inside and outside of the, cdn and its lid. He also urged that § the lid should always be kept o tightly on the can. “Flies will not breed in the house,” he said. “You can eliminate them by keeping the home surroundings clean.”’ Mr. Wallace also urged the city to spray all garbage wagons th DDT as an aid to the ca Using DDT to eliminate the flies also will bring death to mosquitoes, Mr. Wallace said. “But always keep in mind” he said, “DDT never will be a substitute for sanitation.”

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Carry a Newspaper As Warning in Traffic

NEW YORK, June 3 (U. P.).— The daily newspaper was advocated

as a traffic safety -device today by

the Greater New York Safety coun-

Chairman W. Graham Cole advised pedestrians to carry a newspaper during evening or night strolls. “The white of the paper, swinging in the natural motion of the hand while walking, is an effective warn-

ing to an-oncoming motorist,” he,

| said.

" {will be buried in Memorial Park.

| Stewart, Clifford E. Wagoner, Floyd

1 Dr. Oscar Ivanissevich, Argentin

authorized issuance of a statement

Helped With Cash, Advice

(Continued From Page One) or

\something Tony Hinkle, athletic director at tie university, who had an opportunity to watch “Uncle Jack” in ace tion, Said: “I never knew a deserving student who needed help or advice who didn't get it from Mr. Atherton. He liked ‘both boys and girls and did

bold said: “Most students knew that when they got into a tight spot they. could count on Uncle Jack.” . Funeral services for Mr. Atherton will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. He

Pall bédrers for the service will be seven brothers-in-law, Mark H. Brown of Lake Providence, La.; Arch A. Brown of Union City; George O.

R. Mannon, David W. Konold and Paul Vv. Brown, all of Indianapolis, Also acting as pall bearers will be Mr. Atherton’s two eldest nephews, James A. and both of Indianapolis. Directors and staff members of the university, with whom he worked diring his years as secre-tary-treasurer of Butler, and directors of the Jordan Foundation, of which he was a charter member, have been named honorary pall ‘bearers.

U.S. Diplomatic Boycott Of Argentina Ended

WASHINGTON, June 3 (U. P). ~The United States today ended | its diplomatic boycott ‘of Argentina.

ambassador, called at the White House, accompanied by Secretary of State George C. Marshall. They conferred with. Mr. Truman for about 10 minutes. Following the conversation, the White House revealed that recent /expulsion of Nazis from Argentina 'had been discussed. Mr. Truman

that the United States is now will-

Rr i oth coach John Ra-{

bert A. Stewart,

ing to renew consultations with! other American republics looking. toward a mutual assistance treaty.

tations could not take place because Argentina had failed to com-

Mr. Truman that the recent ex-| [to such discussions.

36 WEST 10TH ST. '

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Until now, the United States has | : : taken the position that such consul-| | NAME .

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