Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1948 — Page 13

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the actors ta i about to hn.

or with wings and 8 ihe Hampers are senseless struggle ted. The blood and round. Then they ext day they are a

2 two silly roosters.

7, dumb clucks who

ich war messes. i the name-talling ers ruffled at Ruse 1 touch off the hats es, then here we go &

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St. City of the Western powers

» and Asia, to stop

ry intimidation and come to send Jos esist from further d, Greece, Turkey, 1a or Korea because r further such acts

Korea are the weak hains and strategie

holes: in the Soviet

ous push in Finland RT n in ron Curtain to fold . Yes, Finland and itop Stalin—Now, > :

Evanston, City dio station:

inehart's letter in

mpted to write and prefer the Saturday n Opera instead of

feel the same as Wo ck on the air again,

u Do em?

the shoes of Presi

to gteer the U. & sion. Whether’ you to develop further”

issue another state or their anti-demo* domination of Fine such a statement

ow in advance that

th ‘Russian leaders. y for the past three

yuld be satisfied the open warfare. But they run the great remendous political ists are sitting. In° out of control. One he lid off. And you ght not be able

nake such a display an business. Though ou won't do that. ° ould not commit thé

Bomb

hundred, you would . Your Army, Navy nd weak. Your di* ¢ Mediterranean and by the sul lated by pera is unprepared. Valter B. Smith, ad:

Recovery :

in for sev* nd that is encoursg® ency to quibble over

Not Die in

pation in the Holy Land, portray

an AE) Zedeck Temple, 34th and

e Sts. Ruth Shertok expressed “sorrow other than indignation” iver the s reversal of their proposal to partition Palestine. He said that the U. 8. stumbled “against initial difficulties and shrunk

from It real ‘Is Challenge’ He termed the action as a wime-gaining device” and a | ugight from responsibility.” Trusteeship, as proposed as an alternate to partition by the U. 8, “shows nO clear-cut lead . . . to a solution of the Palestine propjem, There will be only anarchy

hed.” a Be minister called the reversal a “challenge to our instinct of self-preservation. “a e have created a national conscience in Palestine; we are a state in the making,” he told his

dience. : A Scores TU. S. Plan

rathe U. 8

“Why should Palestine be de-

pied hte right to be. a Jewish state when the U. 8. itself became! a state by shedding the yoke of kith and kin 160 years ago?” the Palestinean native asked. Mr. Shertok scored the American “hopeful, yet sightless plan for Palestine.” “The Arabs are more dependent on American dollars than the U. S. is dependent on their oil. oil will not go to Russia because the Arabs cannot buy anything on the world market today with U. 8. 8. R. rubles,” he asserted. He questioned the potential time-delay in debating, passing] any new U. 8. proposal for trusteeship in the United Nations. Appeals for Funds He reminded the audience that the, Palestinian Arab opposes fighting on Holy Hand soil, but

the “Arabs are being led by Hitler's friends from neighboring states.” Mr. Shertok called upon Amer{can Jews to acquire a land, “an ancestry just as other Americans have ‘native’ lands.” He appealed for funds to aid in the establishment of a Jewish state. “This is our pride, future, salvation—we will not give it up,” Mr. Shertok concluded. In closing remarks, Julian Freeman, chairman of the pro-

8 Moving Van Drivers Get Safety Awards.

Eight employees of the Aero Mayflower Transit Co. here received awards for operating moving vans without accident for from one to 11 years: x Elmer G. Servies had no accident in 11 years of driving a van. Others were John A. Switzer and Noah Wethington, six years with no accidents; Hurchel Wethington, five years; Charles E, Eske and James F. Wright, two years, and Eugene H. Hall and William E. Bennett, one year. EE ————

MONDAY, MAR. 22, 1048

shertok Says Here Foreign Minister Expresses ‘Sorro®° Over U. §. Partition Decision in Purim Address «The Jews of Palestine are fighting for freedom just as colonists &id here 160 years ago . . . and we have come back to live, not to oe did Moshe Shertok, first

the annual Purim program

Jews are already a na-|

Palestine,”

minister the destiny of his

gram and head Jewish Appeal here, handed Mr. Shertok a check for $500,000, as {Indianapolis’ Jewry’s contribu{tion to the national fund cam-| paign.

selections. He [was accompanied by Isidor Gel-

ews Beat Off Arab Dawn Attack

100 Dead, Wounded In Week-End Fights

JERUSALEM, Mar, 22 (UP)— {Jewish defenders today beat off

&

‘Don't

English Theater Program Ends Friday

By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor Don’t try to sidestep the duty that falls to your lot. : This sums up a central thought

Theater. Dr Short edits the devotional booklet, The Upper Room, published by the Methodist Church and distributed all over the world.

Three-Hour Rites Friday Holy Week began with Palm Sunday services in the churches yesterday and will continue

the Church Federation, will come to its close with three-hour services Friday between noon and 3 p. m. These commemorate the period when Jesus hung on the cross. “Just as Jesus had his cross to bear, so have men and women,” Dr. Short explained.

\individual he takes a firm stand for the right. For he will then place himself under attack

Evil fights back. Life Is Mellowed

{a fierce, hours long attack by {Arab forces on the colony of

{Hartuv, 10 miles southwest of if You wish to attain a rich and| Jerusalem, after a week-end of Mellow development of character.

bitter fighting in which nearly 100 Jews and Arabs were killed or wounded. : The attack on Hartuv started before dawn by several hundred Arabs. Maj. Michael Comay, Jewish Agency spokesman, said that the Arabs were driven off “with heavy losses.” Jewish casualties were said to be two men wounded.

UN Officials Uneasy

About Future of Body

LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Mar. 42 (UP)—Hopes for the future of the United Nations were pushed to an all-time low today by the East-West power battle in Europe and the Middle East. Top United Nations officials refrained from public comment. But they made no secret of their concern. The two-year-old United Nations was snaken last week by the abrupt American turnabout from favoring partition to Palestine, the decision to air the Communist coup in Czechoslovakia, the fight for Italy, and the possible break-up of the Allied Control Commission for Germany. The Czech case comes up for its second round in the Security Council today. A majority was reported ready to invite Jan Papanek, anti-Communist Czech diplomat. to document publicly his charges that Russia engineered the Communist coup in Prague.

Urges Union to Stop Loading Russ Ships

JERSEY CITY, N. J., Mar. 22 (UP)—The Catholic War Veterans Association appealed today to AFL longshoremen to stop loading machinery aboard Russian ships. : Thomas F. Carlin, Hudson County CWV commander, asked members of the International Longshoremen’s Association (AFL) to join in a protest against sending American goods that

{

“A cross is inevitable for you

'Life is mellowed by suffering. “If you accept God's plan for

Awdrded Emblem

For Phone Work

Mrs. Emma Hart, 32 8S. Tremont St, has been awarded a gold service emblem for 30 years in telephone work. She is assistant chief operator of the Belmont office of the Indiana Bell

Telephone Co. q here. She entered

telephone work in March, 1918, as a student operator, In 1919 she was made an operator and in the same year was promoted to supervisor. Mrs. Hart became assistant chief operator in February, 1947. She is a member of the Hoosier State Chapter of the Telephone Pioneers of America.

Jobs, Pay Rolls Drop in February

Employment and payrolls here dropped during February, the Indiana Employment Security Division has announced. A 1 per cent drop was recorded for employment, while payrolls skidded 3; per cent. These were attributed by division officials to seasonal contractions in the meat packing and rubber products industries. iteismpsarisimsimpiommrn Smee i

Woman Slightly Hurt When Hit by Car

Miss Luella Crockett, 48, of 1717 Prospect St., was struck yesterday evening by a car driven by John H. Albright, 82, of 128 8. Neal St. in the 300 block on State St. Miss Crockett was taken to General Hospital for treatment

Mrs. Emma Hart

{could be used in a war to Russia.

for possible rib injuries.

»

EW!

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Dr. Short Preaches H

“The cross is inevitable for each|™an

from those on the other side, | 2dded,

re

ere

4 { HOLY WEEK PREACHER— | Dr. Roy H. Short, editor of | The Upper Room, will give the | sermons for the interdenomina, |

tional Holy Week services in |

the English Theater.

your life, it will not be easy but] ingful. “If you ask to be exempt from suffering, then you are fleeing the common lot”: Dr. Short giving these lines from k's hymn as an illustra-| tion: |“ ‘Be strong, we are not here to| dream and drift, We have hard work to do and loads to iift. Shun not the struggle, face it. "Tis God's gift, be strong.” |

0. S. Won't Yield To Chill in Berlin

Gen. Clay Reaffirms Occupation Policy |

BERLIN, Mar. 22 (UP)—The| United States has no intestion whatever of getting out of Berlin, Gen. Lucius D, Clay said today, despite a sudden chilling of relations between Russia and. the Western powers here.

The Soviets boycotted seven scheduled four-power meetings here today and asked for a post\ponement of tomorrow's meeting of the co-ordinating committee, the second highest administrative body in Germany, . Coming on top of the abrupt walko the Soviet delegation from the Allied Control Council Saturday, the boycott crippled four-power rule of Germany and cast a cloud of uncertainty over the future status of the Western representations here. Gen. Clay, the American military governor, told newsmen that despite the Russian blows to four-power operations, the United States was staying in Berlin. “I don’t know how many times it is necessary to repeat it,” he said. “I have said it before, and I say it again. We have no intention of leaving Berlin.”

Plan Open House

An open house will be held at Woollen’s Gardens at 3 p. m. Sunday. The music committee, headed by Mrs. Elva Edwards, will

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

=

New Partition

By JOHN L. STEELE

United Press Staff Correspondent | y . WASHINGTON, Mar. 22—The Serves as Co-Chairmen For ‘Economics Day’ Miss Rosalie Glesing, R. R. 5, man and : {to be decisive factors in this has been serving as (o-chairman sims, Vera Owens and Dorothy Merritt:

administration’ call for a mili-| tary draft, and its about-face on Palestine partition, could prove’

year’s elections. There are signs aplenty that some Republicans expect to work them to their advantage. The draft is far from eagerly-sought by the public, and many young men who would be subject to it also have votes. The implications of the reversal on Palestine partition are clear. Most Jewish greups in this country were all out for partition and their disappointment now may be translated into ballot box protests against President Truman. The Jewish vote is important in such key states as New York and Pennsylvania. Taft Gets In Licks Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, a leading Republican presidential aspirant, denounced the Palestine decision as one that prom-|

New

‘Due Out Apr. 7

Stand, Draft

establishment of the Mississippi

“ng * w [Territory will be Issued Apr. 7)... unounced the followingland the Institute, Inc. Vital in Election = he Na . » POSt pils on the honor roll for the _— aint is a skies on Collectors wishing first - day|0rst grading period of the sec-|yqy cities across the country, sails 'y may send not more 00d semester. A. L. s man: ‘Unpopular’ Issues na; 10 envelopes to the Natchez Jighhonorroll: = lager of LS Ayret &'Co." =3 Ma Swing Votes postmaster with money order to|.nd Ree \ors— Palmer, Mr. Masten will be chalrmafi? y 9 cost of the stamps. David of the meeting. Local :

t er, Rainier Furniture Co. jof the program committee for the De a Phy, andiOWner, Rainier Turnure & annual High School Economics felter, Charles Collins. Marjorie! 55 Day to be lield Thursday at Ball [Dad Juve dackion, do ann Penen Glass Expert to Speak »4 State Teachers’ College. rell, Patty Haase. Bill Best, Donna Decker! The American Chemical Soci-

Club, Theta S

ised only “worse confusion” for! (the Hely Land. And he got in a |lick at the draft proposal over! [the week-end by charging the Truman Afiministration with trying to create “war fervor.” Other Republicans have termed the Palestine reversal variously as a “betrayal” and “shocking.” Answer Is Still No ! Meanwhile, friends of Senate! President Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.), said that despite the worsening foreign situation, the Republican foreign policy leader is sticking by his decision not to! be a presidential candidate. | However, it was said that he would not buck a move to hold Michigan's delegation to the Republican convention behind his name for a few ballots at least. This would hold true, it was said, | only if he was placed in nomina- | tion by some other state. Mr, Vandenberg' himself was mum on the change-of administration policy on Palestine. It was understood, however, that he was concerned lest it weaken the world organization whose charter! he helped write. {

Attucks Juniors to Give Comic Operetta Apr. 30 |

Juniors of Crispus Attucks High School will present a comic operetta, “Hearts and Blossom” by Lida Turner and R. M. Stults at 8:15 p. m. Apr. 30 in the school auditorium. Trying out for parts are Elinor Grissom, Joan Horner, Lillian Brown, Marjorie Hogan, Wanda McKissack, Martha Turner, Jean Kersey, Doris 8ims, Horace Peterson, James Dungey, Russell Rochester, Kenneth Reed, Vivian Jones, Thomas Tandy, Earl Kennedy, John Wilson, Richard Highbaugh, Charles Mosely, Dolores Roberts, Elinor Storey, Marvin Richardson, Delmas Harris, Wil-

conduct the program.

HL

liam Clark, Ronald Smith and Muriel Wilson. A

ock's

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