Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1948 — Page 12
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Six Hoosiers Set to Reject
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with the two Democrats from the state in voting for the Omnibus Aid Bill in the House today.
their postwar isolationist path and vote against the measure. In doing so they are rejecting the
House delegation, Majority Leader Charles A. Halleck. Voting with
Plan to Continue Isolationist Path
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, Mar. 31—Three| SELF-POLISHING . | indiana Republicans will
LIQUID WAX
join
The six other Hoosier Repub-| licans are slated to continue on|
leadership of their party and their own dean of the Indiana GOP
Mr. Halleck for the ‘bill will be Reps. Edward A. Mitchell, Evansville, and Robert A. Grant, South Bend. Rep. Louis Ludlow, Indianapolis, and Ray Madden, Gary, the two Hoosier Democrats, are expected to vote for passage also. But Republican Reps. Gillle, Harness, Johnson, Landis, Wilson and Harvey are against it. They thus will follow the leadership of Sens. Homer E. Capehart and William E. Jenner, Indiana Republicans, who voted against the European Recovery Program in the Senate.
Jenner Speaks Against Bill
Sen. Jenner, who is running for Governor while holding his Sen-
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ate seat, took the floor yesterday to help bring out the isola-
existence of the United Nations,”
STUDENT PLAYERS—The senior class of Technical High
|
| 1
School will present the play, “Dear Ruth,” Apr. 9 at Shortridge High School. Discussing the play are (left to right). Marjcrie Hulse, Nancy Lou Osborne, Student Director Janet Gormley, and Juli-
anne Cook.
Eldridge Offers Red Peril ‘Cures’
Times Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON, Mar. 31—
Democracy must combat communism nomic and social program to [ton is associated overcome the inequalities among/with the men,” James A. Eldridge, Indi-/firm of McTuranapolis, told the 20th annual nan and Higgins conference of the Catholic Asso-|in the Odd Felciation for International Peace low Building. at Trinity College here.
by offering “an eco-|
Mr. Eldridge is Midwest direc-|
tor of the American Association] for the United Nations,
“In the three years of the
tionist viewpoint against
was passed. -
the $463 million China Aid Bill. But he failed to join Sen. William Langer (R. N. D.) in saying “No” on the voice vote when the bill
Sen. Capehart had announced
{the people.”
in advance that he was for China
d. While former Vice President Henry A. Wallace, who is heading
party ticket for President, was condemning U, 8. foreign policy before a Senate committee, the Indiana Republican isolationist opposition was being expressed by Rep. Gerald W. Landis from the floor. Although he is against foreign aid, he was for adding Franco Spain to the list of ERP aid recipients, Mr. Landis said. That was adopted by a voice vote in the House, 149 to 52. Condemning the bi-partisan’ fight of Republicans and Democrats to stop the spread of the Stalinist brand of Communist imperialism throughout the world, Mr. Landis said: “The bi-partisan policy is wrong because it denies the people the chance to express themselves at the ballot box on the issues of U. 8, foreign policy. The power of the Congress must spring from
Child Guidance Clinic To Be Subject of Talk
“The Organization and Function of a Child Guidance Clinic” will be the subject of an address at a meeting of the Indianapolis Medical Society at 8:15 p. m. Tuesday in the Athenaeum. . Speaker will be Dr. James M. Cunningham, director of the Bureau of Mental Hygiene of the Connecticut State Department of Health. He will appear here under sponsorship of the Indiana Neuropsychiatric Association.
Bond Sale Contract
; flection of any constitutional the 'Communist-supported third weakness of the charter,
rather they are sympathetic of the revolution of our time.
Mr. Eldridge said, “four of the major bodies and a majority of the eleven specialized agencies have shown remarkable progress. It is within the operation of the Security Council that the major obstacles to peace have been reflected.
* Sympathetic of Times “These obstacles are not a re-
but
“Specifically in the impasse between the Soviet Union and the United States we see that the Democratic concept of the sanctity of the individual is being challenged by the Marxian theory of the supremacy of the state. “Unfortunately the democracies
Alembert Brayton Files Candidacy
Alembert W. Brayton III, a% torney and war veteran, today filed his candidacy for the Republican nomination for state representative. A lifelong resident of Indianapolis, Mr. Bray-
law
A graduate of Shortridge High School, DePauw University and Harvard University Law School, : Mr. Brayton also attended In di YY Biayten ana University. While studying at I. U. he was named to the editorial staff of the Indiana Law Journal and later won the Walter Kessler Scholarship to Harvard. He served with the 3d armored division in Europe during the war. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi, Junior Chamber of Commerce, American Legion, Indianapolis Bar Association, and Republican Veterans of World War 11. He lives with his family at 5260 Primrose Ave.
a» constructive, progressive program. They have not offered an economic and social program to overcome the inequalities among
have not met this challenge with
men.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES :
Soldier of Fortune Starts One-Plane Airline .
* |that rugged individualism is not dead.
{Terry and the Pirates. Right now, with%one borrowed plane. | scheme to carry war-weary Britishers out of their austere island for |a few weeks of madness in Paris, {Wice, Rome, Athens and Cyprus.
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 31, 1943
Jack Harvey, Former RAF Pilot, Leads
Adventurous Life With Girl in Every Airport By FRED SPARKS, Times Foreign Correspondent ATHENS, Greece, Mar. 30—Meet Jack Harvey—living proof
model—has more adventures than he’s half-owner of an airline— he is Hatching an ambitious
This soldier of fortune—948 In
victory, he fiew a Lancaster
Born 27 years ago in Miami, bomber all over captured Europe,
-
Fla, this sturdy lad has patent leather hair, a tooth-paste smile and the kind of shoulders girls follow with their eyes. He talks like a Wall St. confidence-man with a British accent.
Shop Daily From 9:30 A.M. to 5 P. ML.
Before the war, Jack’s parents long _|shipped him to a British school for “polishing.” When Stalin and Hitler pounded the independence| Eigh out of Poland, Jack joined the RAF. In the long months until
smashing acres of countryside. Leath sneezed at him so often he has decided it isn’t catching. Terrified at the idea .of either retooling for school or spending hours staring at a desk blotter, Jack became a plane chauffeur after the war. : t weeks ago (in Copenhagen), Jack thought he saw a gray hair popping through. He
the Italian Alps. But they be-|and gan the first leg to Paris. Paris, passengers had to cough up|London ' advertising more dough for petrol.
writing scads of | sending many calles recy Atllect) to well-heeled chums in whoopie. line, the new Y /
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Chicago. The Chicago bank’s successful
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ALLIED COUNCIL MEETS
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none was brought up.
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TOKYO, Mar. 31 (UP) — The Allied Council for Japan met this There were no items on the agenda and
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