Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1948 — Page 23
orum
ollars for clothes d refuse to. invest ; when their neeq books hated by ritual leaders. the adult r nd. How did our
t to place dn the ste that will con. Be finest and the 5
olitical trail-blaz. a speech about lefeating commuIt also is a sure item and inflation nal systems and
nt economic way dopulation of the come of less than ulation must live rd of the people 00 or less. - ud of in such a
freedom, but all n economic free8 that there fsn’t acting abundance population; he is king an attempt It the head of the
peech Central Ave. cker's acceptance State Convention h the real essence ls, I believe, come n actual concern ks, has been epublicans and ineir preference for nfirms the feeling hat Mr, Schricker "is a real states-
it Indiana is for1¢. He impresses’ g a man who will nit, political unit but rather, will , impartially. ween a politician
{
r adults who have
at it is possible to t away with it, a per hand at home. 3, nag for what he le arguments to
uthority can masmany parents are 3 stick, he seldom
it he was talking 1, “Spare the rod we must stop letadults,
nost’
d
1sion, nding. . ood that he could a man traced on -at 20 paces I was ‘erence who called
a. building
ig when, one day, Billy the Kid had at’s more, that he h the open threat: ereupon Gen. Wal'ything—as a mats Ye
nt
sheriff to whose trusted. When he he started in hot ad a 30 minute's sre was unbroken at both men were hing just had ad Co Se stained six-footer, rapped to his pers Mansion. He got sliberately up the is pony, a circum-looker-on had the rider was prepared
ach hand, met the “Asking him the savily armed man nderstatements of
sheriff of Lincoln ust shot Billy the
yme up with the him, and without ugh the heart. ie way, Gen. Wal stol practice. With r: Instead of pracy, he reduced the 0 minutes. ial for which was submitted for no ts who insist that ipped: Lew Wallace of small firearms.
on FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1048
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DP’s Find Warmth in U. S. Ei Vienna Collar
By PATT WATTS NEA Staff Writer -
newspaper tion of how to pronounce a new-
lege town of Claremont, in the center of the orange groves of Southern California. With the war they became Displaced Persons. For three years they lived in one cold basement room in a Vierma DP camp. But through the aid of welfare agencies they became the “adopted family” of Claremont, and were brought here from the Vienna camp a month later. Now the family is self-support-ing. Jos 1a ky ta ng 35 oe FIND NEW HAVEN—Claremont's adopted DP's: From left, vided for them by the college. Mrs. Adela Sawycka, her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Ginejko, and The 70-year-old grandmother, daughters Tatiana and Natalie.
Mrs. Elizabeth Ginejko, Stays at, And newcomer Mrs. Ginejko|In 1944 they were forced to flee| home and takes Sar t ® House yyy acquainted the women of Warsaw, and were captured in| while her Sanguter, Mrs. Adela claremont with tarts of cottage Vienna by the Nazis. ! Sawycka, ang er aw grand-| cheese, and a mock ice cream| Now the four refugees think Es, al ana, » and Na- made of cottage cheese flavored|they have reached the end of! . a, a on the four, With vanilla and sugar. their long search for home and Claremont, through its Co-or-|security.
women are home in the old-fash-foned house. They keep busy in|dinating Council, had planned for : i
the evening studying American|® Year to “adopt” a European y = customs and history. Fashion and family. The Council is composed 90 In Purdue N-ROTC other typical feminine subjects Of college, civic, and church mem-| To Sail in Cruise gre no lure, but they are fasci- bers. Then they heard of the Times State Service nated with such every-day Amer-Sawycka family. One daughter,| LAFAYETTE, June 18 — Ap- | ican items as soaps and wire dish| Tatiana, was secretary to a niece|, oximately 100 members of the drainers. of a Council member in the pyrgue University Naval-ROTC Often their evenings arg taken Vienna office of the International|ynity will participate in one of up with calls from their neigh- Refugee Organization. After the inree Navy cruises from the West bors. Sawycka family was recommend-|coagt June 23. Two of them, the Before they arrived here, the(ed to the Claremont Council, ar-|genior-Sophomore and Junior Claremont newspaper wrote a rangements were completed in al-|oryizes will last until Aug. 21 and story about the adopted family.[most miraculously short time. |tne Contract cruise will end in Now these hospitable neighbors| To the Sawyckas, displacement!mid-July. \ want the newcomers to becomeiis an old story. In 1917 Mrs.| Officers or Purdue professors acquainted with the American/S8awycka and her mother fled who will join the cruises are Capt. way of life. : from the Bolsheviks to Warsaw.|A. C. Wood, Naval-ROTC. com-!
mandant here; Lieut.-Cmdr, G. B.| Bjornson of the ROTC staff, Prof. R. Norris Shreve, head of the chemical and metallurgical engineering school; Dr. John L. Bray, of the engineering school staff, and Associate Dean V. C. Freeman of the school of agriculture.
Government Work Shop| To Start at IU Monday
Times State Servipes BLOOMINGTON, June 18 — A! workshop for teachers of government will start Monday at Indiana University to continue {through July 2. | _ Visiting instructors include Carl Dortsch, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce; Jack Grieg, former i4 [secretary to the Henry County # Council on Intergovernmental Re-| (lations; Clifford Payne, Henry | (County Council; Paul Fay, Inidianapolis office of Veterans Ad{ministration; Donald A. Rogers, {Bloomington lawyer; Mrs. Alice Neal, Monroe County Welfare Director; Otto Jensen, of the Indian-
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FREEDOM TRAIN-Galy Gecarated streetcars pass throug streets of Seoul in celebration of the opening of the first freeelacted National Assembly in Korea's history. The election was the ons a devsiopmept, vg first act of self-rule by Koreans since the Japanese took over the State examiner, State Board of country in 1904. Accounts.
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