Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1948 — Page 15
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] But the practical stage is here —— coke job was let under a contract calling for :. . > a he ot $70,000. The lumber belangs ene. ay He rade on today. in.other felds..... wf The radioactive. medicine fs. ad-, made of products to determine ef-|should be injected into a certain Anyone who has been engaged in \ tractor and he’s free to sell’it once the inaugura- ~~ (onfronted with this evidence, Mr. Hildreth : 5% =a ministered, usually to animals in{fects on the body. A recent proj- portion of" the “body or taken gycisur-phystes~for 20" sient tion is over. said. by thunder he'd stick by his own book— RECENTLY at Purdue Univer-|experiments, and its course fol-|ect tested for the residue-of soap orally. a “grandfather.” Most of these y- . * Speaking of the inauguration, District Tnaug- ,p hs a ¢ ; SLi sity Dr. John Christian wasilowed through the body with alchemicals left on “skin after] For years agronomists havelgejentists of today dealing with | ural Chairman Melvin D. Hildreth dropped a re- opus changed’ Gen. Harrison, he al- named to a newly created, post,|Geiger counter. This is a device washing and the relation to skin known that every crop takesiths world of tomorrow are in mark to reporters the other day he wishes now wed was astride a dapple prancer and was fol- co-ordinator of bio-nucleonic re-|which is sensitive to and records irritation. various amounts of properties their early and middle 30's. he hadn’ Ce Joel: vas Tide a PH A aronrey search, the emanation of the radioactive] Another was to ascertain the|from the soil with. each growth.| pafore the atom bomb burst : owed -Cown. a : roay ya oY . \ 5 i A professor in the school of material. breakdown of phosphorus and|The rate of depletition never has| over Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, Scribes Crack the Books These are modern times. ormal parade. pharmacy, Dr. Christian heads uz =» calcium in_ teeth ~ from mouth|been known accurately. “|they popularly were envisioned : Marehing units. - ; that branch of the university] POSIBILITY OF greatest pub- : Now, under test conditions, itias “long hairs” dealing with uns
war
Inside Indianapolis By Ed sovola|
“AND ALL THROUGH the night . . .” It’s quite an experience to stay up half the night with a lot ($3889) of money. Gets a man to thinking and dreaming, and strangely enough, "not about 4 brief vacation ip Florida. , Pvts. Willlam Branson and Robert Miller of ~— Fire StationNe.-15-mechanically- -at the collars of their blue coats when I asked them how things were going that night at the Times Mile- * O-Dimes. “Slow,” answered Pvt. Branson and continued a soft-shoe routine to keep his toes warm.
Firemen Had Plenty to Do
IT OCCURRED TO me then that some: ofthe things that happen in a large city are almost magic. Only a few hours before the sidewalks were crowded with busy, hurrying humanity.‘ In that flight to Kilroy only-knows-where, many stopped to keep the silver lines growing. Memhers of Firemen's Post No. 42 of the American Legion had plenty to do. : Now, the streets and sidewalks were practically deserted. . Sometimes the three of us were the only ones on ‘the whole block of W. Washington St. from Meridian to Illinois Sts. ow i¥ oud be «surprised ai. -the people. Who. give. money,” ‘ said Pvt. Miller breaking the silence. “People who look as if they could use the dimes themselves.” x We kicked around the spirit of giving and how it makes you feel, how you can always find someone who has it tougher than you and what a season Christmas time is. A couple of beers and we would have been crying in them, After standing around in the chilly night air for a couple of hours you feel like sitting down and having a cup of hot coffee. Nothing, not even fine thoughts, will replace hot coffee I told the two firemen. ' That's when they sailed into me with warm and glowing praises. of “Burgoo Bill” the fireman’s best friend. William J. Oberting- is Burgoo Bill “Sit in the reserve battalion chief's car,” said Pvt. Branson, “and it won't be long before Burgoo Bill will be here with coffee and sandwiches. He never misses a trick when a fireman
ws
is“out in the cold. That goes for this job or a two-alarm in sub-zero weather.” You get the impression that the proprietor of Burgoo Lunch has a heart of goid and if you mention anything to that effect toa fireman, you're going to get substantiation. From the reserve battalion car I say a man with a bundle under his arm take a heavy work glove off his_hand and dig into his pocket. Looked like a rallroader who has had some bad luck. The man might have had’ a million for all I knew but he certainly didn’t have the appearance. The point is, it makes you think when you
see someone with a patch or two giving for the)
poor. \ There were several examples of that type of
generosity that night. Pyts, Miller and Branson |
said ihey noticed the same thing and the latter
offered an opinion. N
“I think it's because those that don’t have too much are closer to it,” said Pvt. Branson.
It Made Them Feel Good :
THE PORTABLE electric heater in, the car had me rubbing the sand out of drooping eyeballs in no time. Everything just then was fine. The “OIE Heke “seemed to’ give-a-ecouple extra thumps because of the Christmas spirit that was taking form on the sparkling, silver-dotted sidewalk. The little bright spots were so orderly, too. There were Pvt, Miller and Pvt. Branson giving their time to help a cause. Just made them feel! good to be doing something for somebody. Maybe somebody would have a better Christmas for their effort. . . Then there was Burgoo Bill looking after the
: » FEN
SECOND SECTION
|
generation.
More will become reality faster if scientists can devote their time to peaceful application. } As the largest technical school in the United States, Purdue Uni-
firemen. It means his time and money but it makes him feel good. The old boy with the) patched overalls dropped his money because he | knew it would help, too. Every little bit helps,| every kindness. helps, every smile bounces back. That genie. who came out of the charcoal fire one the sidewalk really turned the television on for me. If you take the time to think of the good people and the good things you find yourself feeling pretty mellow. That must be Christmas, ®¥vouldn't you say?
Stray Sticks
: WASHINGTON, Dec. 14 — Sometime after Jan. 20, your lumberman may be able to dig up enough stray sticks of timber to finish your house, And when you show your friends your new ...window sills, supporting beams and other little hunks of wood needed t6 Keep a house from’ - falling down, maybe you can brag: “A lot of important shoe leather scuffed over this board right here.. President Truman stood here when he took thé oath of office. That one over there held up Vice President Albén Barkley. Chief Justice Fred Vinson stood here.” = The vast expanse of flooring which now covers the plaza on the east side of the Capitol, where the Jan. 20 inauguration will be held, has kept an awful lot of lumber off the market.
AFTER conferring with Mr. Truman, Mr.
By Harman W. Nichols
The book is titled “Hildreth’s Interpretive History of Inaugurations,” The chairman said he recommended it. But the reporters, the scamps, dug deeper into the mrchives, with the help of Robert Gooch of the Library Reference Division. wnb mim an Mr. Gooch produced an article called “Inauguration Scenes and Incidents,” by Joseph B. Bishop, which appeared in the March, 1897, issue of Century magazine.
‘Day Was Cold and Bleak’.
MR. GOOCH read aloud from a paragraph describing the inauguration of Gen. William Henry Harrison in 1841: : . “The day was cold ;and bleak with a chilly
anc pete .
“Mr. Truman,” said the inauguration chair-
mine practical applications of a
science born to bring death that
a world might live. Notre Dame and Indiana Universities' are contributing equally as important information. At Purdue, however, there is the opportunity for the sifting of pure
science, extracting the applicable. a LJ on ” GENERALLY speaking, within
two generations, scientists envision controlled atomic energy for power plants, ship propulsion and the furtherance of disease treatment. } With atomic power plants there would be electricity te light and heat the home, provide hot water and generate energy.for the kitchen stove. 1
..,1t Would be possible to produce
fuel wherever propulsion is needed. Right now power for oceangoing ships seems the only logical use, Wherever the energy is used there must be adequate protective material to shield harmful radiation. This limits usefulness to large transportation modes. Safe: ty and expense factors are the determining factors.
through which all radioactive ma-
Atomic Ener
- Pharmacy, Chemistry, Agronomy
- Can Benefit From Research
. By VICTOR PETERSON IF MAN earnestly desires peace, the citizens of th world today stand before a partidlly-opened door whic leads to the better life through atomic research. Staggering are the possibilities which lie ahead for health; wealth and gracious tiving: Mary ‘benefits are’ far in the future, far beyond the life span of this or the next
versity is well-equipped to deter- |
thyroid, seat of goiter disturb-
lar. for thé study of other medi-
h
Yet much is being realized in the laboratories today. :
a
Dr. John Christian, Purdue University, checks radiation “Cutig-Pie; portable counting device: run imnn.
medicine. Already advanced research has| been done at Purdue with radioactive iodine in relation to the| nces, The process used is simicines, where they down within the
ge or break dy.
lic interest is the work being
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1948 Indiana’s Atom Scientists . . . No. 3
Purdue Scientists
with a
|carriers, made radioactive, are be- portance are-iny
ing experimented with, If and
when one is found most effective, sufficient radioactive material will be added. These then will discharge their curing rays evenly through’ the diseased tissue. Industry also is turning to the] university, requesting tests be
wash. The experiment was carried further to include a wide va-
'
g=
e Indianapolis Time
Try To Hitch
“ion ‘Béfa-ray detector progress in coljaboration with the veterinary and agronomy departments. The veterinary department realizes certain substances produce definite weight increases in livestock. By using radioactive material if is possible to determipe . whether -- the substances
is possible to make the properties
by
Waldo Rall (left) notes results of Indiana University's scintillaunder direction of Dr. Roger Wilkinson,
PAGE 15
c€ 3
Pe
plications are of such magnitude as to be overwhelming.
” “ s THE MEN back of the research are a serious, intelligent lot who realize the grave dangers Iinvolved and the marvelous goodto result. For the most part they are young. The field itself is new.
important information which nei-
} and Hildreth announced that the President would be mas; “will trul i RE ad : ; y be the first to REALLY head terial must clear dorie on cancer 00 radioactive and measure the ¢ : ; ’ » . yield 1 public I the first Chief Executive ever to head his wn in, his own parade. ] Interested in siich substances] Currently Purdue scientists are fet OF food and gtinks 2 normal in the given crop. : [Hap Sie Soe tne ¥ouery m augural parade. . "The record is straight on inauguration weather wesides the physics department seeking a medicinal carrier which TON Wat. ® =» These are but a few instances Wroday it is different The scribes said uh-huh, and high-tailed it in 1841, though. None is around to say it wasn't are those of pharmacy, chemis-\will lodge in quantity in malig-| TWO EXPERIMENTS which/of the use of atomic reséarch ap- X
for the Library of Congress to se what the history books said. : ‘ ) There, among other volumes, the scribes found. one by a man named Mr. Hildreth. Same fellow.
windy ana chilly. And 1949, come Jan. 20? Well, the old reliable] Farmer's Almanae, hates to do this to so many people, but it predicts-—snow.
a
Bug Dust
"By Frederick C. Othman
WASHINGTON, Dec. 14—Borax, as I get it, is the kiss of death to the insect we Latins call, delicately, La Cucaracha. The problem is to trick this wily bug into thinking it's good to eat. The scientists at the Department of Agricuiture- claim this ean’t-be--done.-— J.-D. {Killer). Miller, the roly-poly exterminator king of Brook« lyn, N. Y.; claims in accents all his own that it can. And as for that La Cucaracha stuff, says the - killer, why “not come out in the open and Three years ago come next April, "IT remember, the killer brought a consignment of his appetizing (to bugs). boric acid to the capitol of the U. 8. A,, spread it.around on small pieces of cardboard in the caverns beneath this ancient pile, and waited briefly for results. - Soon there was not a cucaracha in the place where previously they had eaten all the glue off
the premises? ble? - : The scientist referred him to the public building experts who brought in a consignment of borax to Washington, only to discover that the
Didn't he know this was impassi-
- -.
has. turned up their. sensitive noses and|.
continued to dine. on the paste in the pots of the Interior Department. : The killer threw up his hands. he, no bug is going to eat borax. “But smell this” he 1 out a cream-colored powder that smelled like cinnamon. They can't resist it.”
Take Dim View of It All
THE government took a dim view of his claims and demanded proof. Killer Miller said he referred his Unclé Samuel to the U. 8. Capitol, but the specialists said that
Naturally, said
try, agronomy and‘ veterinary
{nent growths.
Any number of
will have definite monetary -im-|plied to everyday living. The im-|{white
They are armored knights on chargers. or
>
the Congressional envélopes and ruined the bind- wasn’t enough. They : “ ings of such monumental literary works as the My peer peas: Or. Le Ms 4 ho IU : on I report of the House Un-American Activities Com- e killer: couldn't think of anything better. r. Lawrence M. Langer adjusts the IU magnetic nuclear spectrometer, th r is J interi i ’ Report J The agriculture boys said then he'd have to quit| world's largest, 9 i ag p eter, the a weapon of Mars, this js an interior view of Noire Dame's electrostatic
Not a bug has prowled the corridors of the capitol since then, the killer said. Naturally the Gratifying, Naturally “AND I understand,” the killer said, with
gestures, “that upon the third anniversary of this Src tritmply; there “is talk of the Congress awarding
advertising his wares as.a sure cure of cucarachas. “And if TI do“that,” he said, “I am out of business. On account of the women... The sensitive women.” PCE RC A woman, he said, doesn’t mind talking about ants in her kitchen. But let a couple of cucarachas get in, and she’s ashamed. She buys a jug of the “killer's powder and gets rid of them in a hurry,
‘Washington Calling’ Tallies Score On Year's Predictions .
By Scripps-Howard Newspapers
“Washington Calling”
Farm Bureau ‘was blamin, WASHINGTON, Dec. 14—Early Republican in 1948,
g theland interpretation of various controlled H o u s e/economic changes. ’ (Agriculture Committee . for
{the Appropriations committees; [that farm co-operatives would
a|. We were early in- identifying win their tax fight, that Hawail
two weeks before they were made public and told you there would be no price drops as a result of
jtold you this was a rough yea} for would-be prophets. | Did _you get any sounder tip
good deal of it. | - La »
~ for you the. fellow-traveler-and|and Alaska would not win their IN SEPTEMBER we told
unist backing for the here wou fights in 1048, that
the Republican anti-inflation bill, Youljace party. there would be ‘no legislation
me a kind of vote of thanks. A sort of scroll o Honor. Naturally, this is gratifying.” Or at least it was, the killer moaned. ' Hen
but does she tell her neighbor? She does not. ——80-he's-got-to- keep on getting new and The -only-way-to-do-that-is
‘though Mr. Truman would sign it. secretive customers. We sald there would be no price a
Washington. What did he mean, .saying his powder was guaranteed to: Kill ‘roaches ‘and: keep them off
The killer said he was canceling the order for his clawhammer coat, because what good are * Congressional “honors. for. an ‘ex-ext ator?
maries,
We had -predicted Gen.
Also in September we said
Cunningham Put
¥ EE RE EE WE WERE WRONG in mini-
mizing the southern revolt against.
’ during the Dixlecrats had driven Negroe t At ¢ i he was thinking about getting measured for a to advertise. And if he can’t tell the ladies what{{rom any other source 8, 18 aad arly €gToes| . We told you correctly that Sen.|toughening the Taft-Hartley Act |control during the year, but that i --jong-tailed-coat to. wear at the ceremony, When his Wii will do, they won't buy. it and he's THe Snr Year of Guts Was sets ay, Panty Dy | Bridges and Rep. Taber were go-| We gave you accurdte fjgures/todified rent control would con- + the” Agriculture ‘Department hauled’ him: down- to Si ft Just: after: the “Wisconsin pric fection to Wallice: t= m- DS to hold up European aid inion President Truman’s budget te, = es
4 "gw - MacArthur would lead. We were GOP ‘leaders were concernea (11 Criticizes rong, but so were most of the: about “over-confidénce;. that they) WHEL WI IMVIRUW
jother. experts, and predictions be- were admitting half a dozen Sencame a standing joke In Wash-={ators might be Tost. Ry - “ington- even then. | We told you a little later that A check of the year's output in- President Truman's aids were dicates our major trouble when sure his campaign was getting reit_ comes to campaign predictions suits. We reported gains for him| Municipal Court was a touch of nearsightedness. in California, and said he was today criticized “licensing withWhen we took a good look at the strong everywhere west of thelout investigation” of a dog ken: : presidential situation from a dis-| Mississippi. Inel owned by Ben Surface, 75, of nounced today by Sheriff W. Pete eral Reserve Board, right on the tance of ‘some 10 months, we #8 @ {715 Maxwell St., as he found Sur- Anthony, Muncie, president. {draft act, and two weeks early d to see clearly. It was only WE RECORDED that Truman face guilty of cruelty to animals, Other committee members and|in telling you what regulations as we got closer that our vision eo... se were sure the mission to| He fined Surface $50 and COStS!their home counties include John| Would be issued, how young men became blurred. | Moscow ct had helped the and suspended a 30-day jal sen-| ; : {would be called up. On Jan. 3, 1948, the staff met proje a elpe A Surface was arrested ‘when | ITierweiler, Vigo: Luther Yoder, | We were right on the tax bill and compared notes and came President rather than hurt him. police found 14 dogs housed in|Elkhart; Victor Fehrbach, Du- veto and in saying Mr. Truman up with this: “As of today, we| And we added this significant] Leon Bayliss, Hendricks;]and. Marshal Stalin ld not
yan. On Sheriffs Group Kennel License | Appointment of James F. Cunt : |ingham, Marion County. sheriff
4 Judge Clark lect: as member of the 1949 legis:
{lative committee of the Indsaun/ We were right on confirmation F 2 . , i 0! Sheriffs Association was an-\,s mhomas B. McCabe to the Fed-
President Truman early this year, but right “In saying ‘efforts to force Mr. Truman to step “aside
for another candidate would get nowhere.
| ‘Mother Defies Court Order [hau | | For Operation on Daughter Prefers Prayer Over Doctor's Services FT. WAYNE, Ind; Dec. 14
For Child Stricken With Paralysis TE ie es
NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 14 (UP) —Mrs. Mary Snyder defied a' komo, Ind., gravedigger wi - court order today and said she would count on prayer instead of fessed the — ee pe id surgery to restore the use of her 10-year-old daughter's paralyzed Ft. Wayne women, today had unlegs. til May 26 to prove he was under the influence of drugs when he heduled operation, and said |pleaded guilty. -
gh Gets Execution Delay
She took the: little: blond girl out of Foundation Héspital here yesterday, just a few hours before a sc
nal
think Truman will be elected. piece of information: |and around his "filth-littered”|bols; ini
|. Lobaugh was granted his ath ishack. Surface produced a license,
Court ruling that ordered her to|tion and ordered his ex-wife tolgtay of execution yesterday. He let doctors treat her daughter. [allow Marilyn to undergo sur-|first was ay to die last Little Marilyn Joan Moger was SY: |Feb. 9. The latest stay postponed eager for the operation which |the execution scheduled Jan. 15.
she would appeal the Youth, ~~ Dewey and Warren have the best | chance for Republican nomina-|corn-belt developments, Harvest tion.” jt peak there this week. If prices
Mother Changes Mind e 8 8 dip further due to a bumper crop,
doctors believed would let her| At first Mrs, Snyder defied the Allen County Circuit Judge] BY OCT. 30, the ‘last columniplus loss of storage facilities, walk again. ' | court because, she said, she didn’t William H. Schannen also re- before election, the staff nani. Democrats look for quick reBut her mother called a hait at believe in medicine. But last Fri- scheduled a second hearing at mously was. predicting Gqv.|laction against GOP. Republican
day she relented and brought which Lobaugh's attorneys hope D&wey would win. And by a|Congress cut Commodity Credit back home to Long Beach, Miss, Marilyn here, where doctors pre-/to win a new trial by proving he heavy majority, it was predicting Corp. funds, reduced storage.” “I just couldn't go through with pared to operate. was drugged when he confessed|a Republican Senate and House.| Oct. 23 we reported that -the 1" she sald” : Hospital attendants said the the murders. The hearing date But even at that point, we big GOP high command was getting Injured in April mother was: “most co-operative” was changed from Jan. 10 to|to note, three staff members were fittery about the Republicans’ u n Ap all week-end and almost up to May 26. saying it would be a Democratic|chance of holding the Senate and Marilyn hasn't walked since operating time yesterday. She last April, when she suffered an stayed at Marilyn's bedside and
cl olen ———————— Senate, six were predicting a tie, that they were conceding the loss : y aceident that paralyzed both legs. prayed constantly. eveland Editor's
and one was also insisting thereof House seats (number unspeciwould be a Democratic House. fled). That same column also reSince then her mother has re- ' But yesterday, almost as at- Funeral Rites Set We told you repeatedly that ported the Democrats were sisted all efforts to give the girl tendants were preparing to take By Scripps-Howard Newspapers various factors were swinging '‘Perked up” and expected to take medical care. |Marilyn to the operating room,’ CLEVELAND, Dec. 14 — Fu-|yotes. to Democrats, even if we the Senate at least. But a week “Religious ‘and prayerful” care Mrs. Snyder changed her mind. neral ‘services for Carlton K.|qiq assume, in alternate items, later the staff decided it knew of an “authorized practitionér” Marilyn went home without ‘the Matson, associate editor of thelihat Dewey and Warren were more about the campaign than of the Christian Science Church operation. * |Cleveland Press, will be held at|going to win anyway. the Republicans and Democrats would do her more good, Mrs.| - 1:30 p. m. Wednesday. Mr Mat-| We told you of dissent in the together, and voted the former in. son died Monday of cancer. [Republitan Party and dissatis:| BOT AER # ’
the last minute and took the girl|
" Snyder maintained. {HOFFMAN, CHIANG TO TALK
deloth Marilyn's father,’ Norman NANKING, Dec. 14 (UP)--Paul| His family has requested that/faction over the Kind of cam- ALL the c¢am1 with : Moger of Carpio, N. D. finally|G. Hoffman, economic co-opera- no flowers be sent, that instead|paign the heads of the ticket |Paign was only part of the year's 1broid- went to the“courts to try to get!tion administration chief, will meet the money be contributed to the|were making. column coverage, and predicting 4. medical attention for his Sag. h- Generalissimo Chiang ‘Kai-| American Cancér Society, Wash-| We told. you, as early as/Was only a small part of our i ter.- The Harrison County. (Miss.) {shek at dinner tonight at the Chi-{ington Building, Washington,|August, that there was unrest business. We gave you weekly Youth Court approved his peti<|nese leader's official residence, ID. C. among the farmers, and that the analyses of the foreign situation : a 4 , v re . ’ arvensis
~ naa
“Democrats are also cheered by gjlowing him to board that num-| ey,
ber of dogs. “A lot of city, county and state
rjofficials ought to have red faces py,raaker,
lover this,” Judge Clark sald. “If {they {issue licenses without inlvestigdtion, collect only the fees {without ascertaining the facts, they deserve embarrassment.” | Judge Clark also criticized the {board of trustees of Indiana Uni{vergity and {its rental agents {when Prosecutor John Carson {said that the shack in which Sur{face lives:is owned by the uni{versity and rented to Surface even ‘though the State Board of {Health has ctondemined the premises. | Schmidt & Smith, agents for the property, confirmed that it (was university property and said steps would be taken to evict the kennel. Surface told the judge he took “good care” of his dogs. He said that officers found the premises dirty only because he had been busy the day before and hadn't icleaned., :
v
{Howard Maxwell, Johnson; Harry
Rush; Richard Thayer, | Bartholomew, ’ ! | Also Ora Wilson, Wayne; Roy|
Montgomery; Frank) McDonald, Vandéerburg; Walter |Sauley, Jefferson; Stephen Hip-| sak, St. Joseph; Lester Hineline, |Porter, and Edwin Kirkpatrick, Hancock. : Memembership on® other committees includes: Safety—Harry Jackson, Tippecanoe; George 8. Burke, Miami; Walter Baxley, Harrison; Lester Enochs, Fayette, and Norman Reeg, LaPorte; Mental Health Carey M. Davis, Hamflton; Jesse: Warner, Btarke; Joe L. Brogden, Madison; Fred Botts, Parke, and John P. Hoff, DeKalb. ‘Divorces - Moley CLEVELAND, Dec. 14 (UP)— Mrs. Eva D. Moley today won an uncontested divorce from Raymond Moley, contributing editor | of Newsweek and former mem-| ber of the late President Roosevelt's brain trust. ¢
Iproduce, ar
meet; right in saying Lewis Douglas would not be roving ambase sador for the European Recovery Program; in saying Atomic Energy Commission. would not be put back under the military, and in predicting a one-year reciprocal trade extension with crippling amendments. LAREN J WE TOLD YOU early there would be no federal aid to education, no minimum wage or civil rights legislation, no health bil, no international wheat agreement, but that the bill exempting raflroads from anti-trust legislation would pass over a veto.
We did poorly on forecasting -
the new Secretary of Labdr and on picking the Democrati¢ VicePresidential candidate. But. we did tell you Russia would be brought before the United Nations General Assembly as a menace to world peace, Throughout sistently gave you inside infor." mation from the Defense Department that no other column could
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