Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 April 1948 — Page 21
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jon returns start relling ey will show ag ate’'s 53 delega ota got only 23 at most. > listener may take this from Ohio's favorite-son fo right, =
at Mr. Stassen has GOP
iT the state's 32 congree only one candidate fof
5 De elected: wh aT OT
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epublican rural district eneralship by staying out have a chance, first and second districts of the state and inclods jtassen also stayed out
ndidates.
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legates, it's a ) ely oe " Taft Wb majority of the delegatth through Ohlo, Apr. 31:9 | personal - . pr \
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ANIE!. M. KIDNEY By D NIE
WA GTON, Apr. william = E. Jenner (R.. Ind.)| charged today that Norris E.
wheat agreement which the Senator contends penalizes the United States.
Mr. Dodd was named Food and|
Agriculture Director of the United Nations. s - Because the wheat - agreement doesn't include two large produc—Russia .
aa be turned down by the Senate, the junior Senator from Indiana o : Price to 2 “The fact that neither Russia nor Argentina, two of the five major wheat producers of the world, is represented in this agreement makes it exceedingly doubtful that it could ever function efféctively,” Senator Jenner said. :
“Argentina government. has peen selling its whéat to a hungry. Europe at prices ranging from $5 to $6 per bushel and apparently they want no part of any agreement which would reduce these prices as low as $1.10 per bushel. “This entire plan strikes me as another New Deal experiment. in international politics under which he-would-bargain-a' perity of American agriculture in exchange for precisely nothing. I find no advantage which would accrue either to our farmers or our nation under agreement,
while its cost to both could be! -
tremendous. . Cut in Half “The parity or fair exchange price of wheat today is around $2.20 per bushel and this figure would be cut in half under the proposed agreement, even though it is promised that the difference.
international agreement price would be made up. to the farmer out of public funds. Presumably,
we would also be called upon to!
lend the recipient nations the money with which they would pay the international agreement price so, in the end, it would be another give-away proposition, with the entire cost being borne by the American people. Another objection to the plan
{isthe “fact that whenever floor,
prices have been placed under farm commodities, they have tended to" become prices. I am sure that American farmers will not be content with $1.10 per bushel for their wheat while
farm labor, and other production costs remain at their present high
“The money which the Amer fcan taxpayers will be asked to spend in this latest New Deal scheme in the form of subsidies, which would go as high as one billion dollars, is over and above the expenditures which the American taxpayer must make under the European plan. “The United States representative at the Thirty-Six Nation Conference which evolved this
agreement was the former Un-|
dersecretary of Agriculture, Nor-
ris E. Dodd. Mr. Dodd, upon his
return from the conference was rewarded by being handed an §18,000-a-year-tax-free job as Food and Agriculture Director of the United Nations.”
Butler Students
Miss Reinacker mplain ~Medals and keys for outstand-| Ing service have been awarded to two senior members of the But-
ler University band, Charles A.|
Henzie, director, announced today Awards went to Miss Dorothy M. Reinacker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Reinacker, 1583 8. East St, and Alan C. Kamplain, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Kamplain, 3909 Boulevard
Miss Reinacker received the! Robert Schultz medal, given by Tau Beta Sigma, national women's band honorary, from Mr.
Shutz, former Butler band: di-|
rector,
Quill, - Kappa Delta Pi, Mathematics Club and Phi Kappa Phi.
She is a graduate of Manual High 8chool. :
Mr. Kamplain was ‘qwarded the| -
J. B. Vandaworker Key as outHanding male senior band mem-. ber, Mr. Vandaworker, also forTer Butler band . director, pretented the annual award of Kappa Appa Psi, national band men’s
heal, | Cagislh | Us ii
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