Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1948 — Page 3

OUSE

summer wear!

od coller, cuffs

® sizes 9 to 15.

econd Floor

, U. 8, Pat. Off.

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| Old-Timers Giving Away fo Young ood — By EARL RICHERT Qe SA BE PIN

~: Texas. Senator Hatch, who is

Pass Up Secrets,

ne

“Now Sonate | To Have That

Post-War Look

By Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, June 4—The new Congress beginning next January will see the post-war era come into full bloom in the slow-

ng Senate. aanging old-timers are quitting

r+ present The . . Senate has 26 Mr. Richert “post-war” Senators, counting william C. Feazel, successor to the late Sen. John Overton of ana. Lo umbents are not seeking re-election, thus insuring that 32 of the 96 Senate peats next ses- _ gion willbe held by “new blood.” | . Hawkes Dealt Out Top man of the six quitting is Majority Leader Wallace White (R. Me.), one of three GOP Senators whose service goes back to pre-Roosevelt days.

The other. five are three one-{ .

term Republicans: Albert Hawkes of New Jersey, E. H. Moore of Oklahoma and Harlan J. Bushfield, of South Dakota, and two Democrats, Carl Hatch of New Mexico and W. Lee O’Daniel of

scheduled to recelve a federal judgeship in New Mexico, has served in -the- Senate. since. 1933 and Sen. 0'Daniel since 1941. Of the three one-term Republicans who aré quitting, Sen. Hawkes, a former president of the U. 8. Chamber of Commerce, was dealt out by his party organization in New Jersey and chose not to wage a primary con test, - ‘Pledged One Term kK Sen. Moore, wealthy oilman apd ex-Democrat, is sticking by his election pledge to serve only one term. And Sen. Bushfield is recovering from a serious illness which made it impossible for him

~40-enter-a-primary campaign. | ~~

A primary contest being watched with much interest here is the Kansas battle involving Sen. Arthur Capper, dean of Senate Republicans. Sen. Capper, who is nearing 83, is being opposed by former Gov. Andrew Schoeppel. Many of Mr. Capper’s former supporters have deserted him on the grounds that he is too old. Sen, Capper has been in the Senate since the Wilson administration, With Sen. White quitting, the defeat of Sen. Capper would leave only one pre“Roosevelt-era Republican still in the Senate, Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan ~presuming that he doesn’t move to the White House. : Long's Son Youngest Nine pre-Roosevelt Democrats are still serving, however, headed by Sen. Kenneth McKellar of Tennessee, who came to the Senate in 1917. One incumbent already has been defeated in a primary contest. The loser was Sen. William ‘B. Umstead (D. N. €.), who was appointed to the Senate in Detember, 1946, to fill the unexpired term of the late Sen. Josiah Bailey, Youngest of the next Senate likely will be Huey Long's son, | Russell, who is being groomed | for election this fall to serve out Sen. Overton's unexpired] term. He'll be- 30 by election!

time, old enough to be seated in| the Senate,

Scientist Ur B 3 WASHINGTON, * June 4 — A

Sclentist urged here that no secret research. should be done. under the proposed new National Scince Foundation. ' or Hugh C. Wolfe, physicist at City College of New York, told the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce that the foundation should enCourage free exchange of inforJootlon by not undertaking proects coming under military security classification, The extension of security to hew areas of science, particularly ic science, 1s a source of sertet, Concern to nearly all scienos, sald Dr, Wolfe acting as a Pokésman for the Federation of American Scientists, ’ pro that legislation ameoishing the foundation be a ed to provide that the new ~ cy “not . . . give continuing Support to research requiring seSur Y classification.” When work aie or the foundation required ferred to arm: It would be transProposes er group under this a bill to establish the founda- : n 18 now in the House commit6 after having passed the Senate. Last year, President Truman

vetoed a meas foundation, UN, calling for the

Sy ————————— Purchasing Agents lan Party at Hillcrest

Officers for the coming ear bin be installed at a iy of t Purchasing Agents AssociaJom at Hillcrest Country Club a ® 10, beginning at noon with o ou tournament. ey in¢lude Arthur T.- Clay, Draident; D. M Johnson, first

; OB. second vies president; E. E, Mo-

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