Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1949 — Page 1

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a 60th YEAR—NUMBER 192

tonight 46, high tomorrow 78.

.

ia TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1049

Entered as Second Class Matter at PostoMew Indianspois. Ind. Issued Dally

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PRICE FIVE CENTS

‘We

ET

Hits, Then Pas

Darts Into Its Path De

On Judge Minton

Senafor Ferguson = Blocks Fast Vote |

. WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 (UP) ~The Senate Judiciary Committee today delayed action on the nomination of Judge Sherman!

Have Lot to Be Thankful For’

Mrs. Fred Thomas and Verne Eugene . . . "He'll never forget this experience.” %

Of Brother—'Don’f Run Across That Street’ | HE desk of 6-year-old Verne Eugene Thomas at Ca- ures thedral Grade School was vacant today. Verne Eugene was at home, being comforted by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thomas, 18301; N. Ala- firmation in authoritative quar-

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i

i . . . Czechs Kill Finds Children In Icebox After : » Red Informer Newsparer Hunch Syrnrise 4.8¢ | ALEXANDRIA, Va. Sept. 20 . . " . (UP)~Two smail girls owed their . } lives today to Mrs. Richard MaAgainst Priest {son's careful reading of the wr Gut n Levy \ | paper. wo. | Tucked away on an inside page 1 2 Party Insiders, ‘ ‘of yesterday's Washington Timesi i ticed a United Press dispatch Catholics Jailed [describing how a 3-year-old ron £-%. PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia; b.eompartment of an old icebox, Sept. 20 (UP) —A Communist, When Margaret Gorman, 5, and

Original Budget Requests Indicated

Large Increase By NOBLE REED

Herald, the Alexandria housewife! By the Hundreds |no,. Cal., boy was found dead in missing from ner neighborhood a

| | Mrs. Mason's mind. informed source reported to-| Acting on what she said was a dav “pure hunch,” she decided to!

, (village of Kelo near Valasske the two little girls,

Mezirici, some ‘215 ‘miles from . = 5. Prague. * MRS. MASON immediately

iy The reported bloodshed was the Summoned two firemen who lived £5" | first in the struggle between the/In the neighborhood and they ad- ? respiration

gram along with increased as

‘> |murfist government since rioting! "7 [last June “in strongly Catholic] v7 Slovakia. | . +. | Meanwhile, hundreds ‘of per{sons, both Catholic and Commu. {iaymale 1 icebox. Dist, have been arrested in a twWo-|they had been imprisoned 20 to! tomorrow, is |day campaign against the churchizg 1ninutes and would have died] ‘ City Rate $2.048.

Be {and “traitors” within the Commu- ir 3o Mason had waited a few! 3 | . | {nist ranks, it was reported today. minutes longer to check.

Jail 200 Priests Reliable

to.a hospital.

church sources re-

complete control of the church. | At the;-.same time reports.

Philippine Hero {circulated in. Prague that “hun- PP . | dreds” of Communists—no specific’

Elected, 53 to 5 were mentioned — had

been rounded up in recent weeks. UN delegates open session “full, Also the

spite Warning Cry

Center

ranking party members.

The reports wholly lacked con- : po ) (UP)—Brig. Gen. Carlos P. Ro- ooooq ion this year's mulo, Philippine war hero and There

i Tabulation of property tax { |" informer who turned in a vil- Chery! Sumption, 4, were reported rates for 1950 today disclosed

'\ lage priest was shot to death tew hours later, the newspaper ® SUrprising reduction of 4.8/down, a in a Moravian forest, a well Story immediately flashed into cents below the 1949 levy for

. . most Indianapolis taxpayers. | . . Original budget requests earlier 0 | p egins check two abandoned iceboxes had indicated another big jump) The informer was reported shot phehind a nearby veterans’ housing in Marion County taxes for next ggeg ss . by “unknown” persons in the project. Inside one of the boxes, year but substantial reauctions Hibbin Railroads Liska forest two miles from the unconscious and near death, were in the proposed spending prosessed property valuations reduced the over-all rates for next

Indianapolis taxpayers living | Catholic .Church and the Com-{milligtered _ aftifcil 1¢ take the inside Center Township will pay, Coal-hauling railroads feit the n. | ah Siz per 31% of property yall first effects today of a walkout The lucky youngsters later toid AON IeXt™ year: compared 40 yay on - United Mine Workers [their . parents that‘ a 3-year-old $4.49 this year. Tabulation of Ly Nm a inadvertently locked rates for units in the eight other‘? A ". Police said townships will be completed by

The reduction was revealed to reduce forces because of the {after the Marion County Tax Ad-|coal strike.” {justment Board fixed the rate for

! - g : : | the City of Indianapolis last night|Yyet. All coal train crews probably| ors | ported th t y Bo Il close Ome j . 22 1% es arrest of more man | Picks Romulo at $2.048, only 1.8 cents more Will be idled and we'll & . | riésts in Bohemia and Moravia ° Ballot Put Off Boy Escapes Death as A uto peau hd Moravia

The crackdown ‘was de- four cents off the rate originally 3 0 M scribed as part of the Communist] () Head Assembly Proposed by the City administra-| WET OO n Ie per ses ver IMM government campaign to take ; | The slight rise in the city rate Decause of the strike. Most rewas offset by a three-cent reduc{tion in the city school levy from! {$1.46 this year to a 1950 levy of| $1.43

than this year. The board sliced

TOWNSHIP ren making their regular payAmong them were said to be high! ©f pep and vinegar.” ...Page 3 rate came down from 20.5 cents, & 8h ’ “to 17.4 cents due to the fact that ments to the welfare fund indi-

FLUSHING, N. Y.. Bept. 20020 123 cents due 1o the | Sata they would make the Segu:) all outstanding bonds had Deen lar payment this week, even/d

was also a reduction oft

Steel Mills Get Ready To Shut Down Furnaces

Taxpayers Get Still Run Full Blast,

But Await Signal for

Saturday Ni

ight Strike

Truman Has No Plans to Intervene But May Change Mind, Says White House

By United Press

The nation’s steel mills were prepared today for a quick

shutdown in case of a strike

by CIO United Steelworkers

|Saturday at 11:01 p. m., Indianapolis time.

Production men have their instructions on procedure. At a given signal from top officials they will start the shut

NYC to Cut Off Coal | Trains, Close Offices

By United Press

In Indiana, Chief Clerk J. W.

{Gillespie of the New York Central, sald “naturally we are going

“To what extent, we don't know

telegraph offices,” he said. Most industires which use coal

{ported they had stockpiles that would run for between 30 and 90

days. Blame Miners The coal operators, who have

hough the ‘miners are on strike.

Sen. Homer Ferguson (R. Mich.), obtained enough backing

‘Strong-Arm’ Raid

nied Verne Eugene and his | older brother, Richard, T,

‘Titoist Ideas’ T he Communist newspaper

at 15 cents. them back to work, even though

Mr. Romulo received 53 votes Setting the city rate was the Illinois and Indiana producers

‘Crossword ..

to put across hjs demand that the nomination follow the, usual course in such cases. { As a result, the committee will post official notice of the nomi-|

nation and, if protests are filed, | Cleaner Tells of Being will decide next Tuesday whether) Forced to Unionize th int-| Io hola hearings ob the appol | By PHILIP. F. CLIFFORD JR. Acting Chairman Harley M.| Increased raids by AFL Kilgore (D. W. Va.) said there “strong-arm” men on small dry

was no formal vote. He- hadi i were forecast tohoped the seven-day rule on cleaning shops were fo >

nominations could be by-passed day by rival unionists, after a to speed Senate confirmation of South Side cleaner told of being the former New ’Deal Senator. forced to unionize his shop by ' |AFL. Teamster organizers. Agent Attaches Home Charges that the AFL was

Of Maria Montez !launching a city-wide memberHOLLYWOOD, Cal., Sept. 20 ship drive on small shops now in

Increase Forecast

(UP)—A Hollywood press agent, contract negotiations with CIO Paul C. Ross has-attached thelofficials came from Joseph home of film star Maria Montez Romer, state director of the Reand her actor hgsband. Jean tail, Wholesale and Department

Pierre Aumont, in a Superior Store Union-CIO.

Court suit for $2160." Mr. Romer said his office has Mr. Ross obtained the attach- heen flooded with complaints ment writ yesterday charging the from cleaning establishment couple owes him for services workers and operators who com-

rendered between 1942 “and 1948. jain they have been pressured The house currently is being — rented to comedian Jerry Lewis. (Continued on Page 3—Col. 2)

On Inside Pages

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‘Slashing budget of Sunnyside Sanatorium stirs wide ‘ protest . . . termed “‘unbusinesslike and undemocratic” cut ...... eT be Tele Te Isle Tnt iets RE ra PASS Hey, boys and“girls. . . Want to win a nice puppy? Read about’ the new Times contest ............ Page 2 RCA here will add 400-500 to-its payroll to meet demand for television sets, radios and;phonograph YECOTAS ++ ssmsssvesmaisssroseedarearrasesse. Page

News of the women's world . . . luncheons, organizations, Page 6 . . . Blackwood on Bridge, foods fashions, My Day ........: Mrs. Manners and the Marriage Clinic.............Page 8 What goes on in the theatrical world . . . Erskine Johnson ........ceeeivrrssnsanivsrinnenss. Page 10

The God-Seeker . , . Sinclair Lewis’ great novel. ....Page 11 Hardware Co.

[-ran in front of it, was driven

| St. and Keystone Ave.

Tasers esensat ee, Page Tibranch bank will’ be added to the —

Rude-Pravo today warned Czech-|in the secret ballot cast by deleon their way this morning to |gjovaks with “Titoist ideas” that 8ates from the 59 United Nations 19th “and Delaware where they were to catch a [them out without mercy.” school bus. The boys turned loose from her

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hands -and |Czech Communists was coupled |ballot was declared invalid. skipped on ahead, around a |with an official news agency ac-|

« = = {trial. “DON'T IN Lazar Brankov, former Yugo-|in the absence of street” BY eros hal slav charge d'affaires, was quoted | Foreign . Minister Richard scream. as-saying that “Titoist-American” Evatt, president of the Third representative, City Then there was a screech of espionage in Czechoslovakia was) Assembly. brakes. When Mrs. Thomas "even er than in Hungary.” |

oe . Informed sources said they bereached the corner Verne Eu- lieved the government. could not gene was prostrate under an. ignore the Brankov testimony. V automobile, even with the back They expected - a trial would be' ’ wheels. . ‘held here, with Marshal Tito of . The automobile had knocked Yugoslavia, the Urited States hurch Pro ect the boy down and passed and the Vatican accused of backalmost entirely over his body, ing the defendants. which fell between the wheels.

But the weeping lad was more i frightened than hurt, A Gene- Atmosphere Quirk { eral Hospital ambulance doctor : : | treated bruises on his forehead Sends Fire Signal

and left arm, and then he was taken home. .

Australian/on top.

bers pointed by their action.”

Presbyterians to ‘Buy io and tighten our belts.”

Ex-Ordnance Plot By EMMA RIVERS MILNER T

imes Church Editor

. . ————— — —la | LOS ANGELES, Sept. 20 (UP) in the 21st and Arlington com- a bureau of personnel. —Firemen in Cleveland, O., are munity. no help at all in putting out a. The Los - Angeles

“WE HAVYE a .lot to be thankful for,” his mother said. “He'll never forget this experience. No, he's not going to school today. He's going to

stay at home—and I'm going “ “hi " retary, to. buy the land to stay right with him.” Battalion Chief 11,” he called

’ av ov .| Herbert Coble, of Indianapolis, The automobile, which was oy or ANS Yu presented a petition of 281 adult moving slowly when the boy. i 0 marrace.” 5 w . Signers requesting. the new Parker Murder Case a i ol church, 3 : by Albert H. Medcalf, 49, of = There isn’t any such address,” | "mo Rev. Mr. Mueller said the Appeal Hearing Set 1826 N. Alabama St. .. was the quick reply from Bat- length of the list “exceeded all

. _ talion Chief 11. - records in such cases in the in the appeal of Arthur 1 Stores, Bank

Indianapolis

today. 0

of the city's numerous offices.’

~ ” LJ . . “YOU MEAN to tell me I don't SPUrch. know my Los Angeles?” Mr. Spainhower barked. “Maybe so, but this is Cleve-

national missions committee and (oday for Oct. 4. a commission to proceed with the L

board's final action as it brought{have met the regular welfare o a close a series of tax rate/fund payments. ty streets, |“the anger of our-people will weed Member-nations. Foreign Minister , 40s yesterday in the court{Vladimir Clementis of Czecho-y qe Throughout the meetings,|{UMW District. 11 in Indiana, The press warning to errant Slovakia received five votes. One (ne economy-minded board ar-|asked if the union would order ed for tax-rate reductions with the men back to work said “that Mr. Romulo accepted the gavel city and county officials seeking|is a matter that will have to be | corner. {count of the Budapest treason from Australian Ambasador Nor-lover-all budget increases. With- surveyed.” : {man J. O. Makin who presided out exception, the board came out

»

Louis Austin, president .of the

mill, A : Carnegie-Illinois Steel, subsidiary of U. 8. Steel, Jones & Laughlin and small companies said it was too early to start the shutdown. : And a spokesman for U. 8. Steel said the preparations are routine, “The production men know the process.” he said. “If the dead-

process which takes about 36 hours in an integrated

BULLETIN WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 (UP)—The government failed

dispute but sald it would keep on trying. lock continues, the shutdown plans will be put to work. Right now we are operating with no furloughing of men.” The mills will start slowing down early Friday if there is no settlement in sight on the union's

demands for of the pension and insurance reeommendations of the steel fact

finding board. Meanwhile the White House said that President Truman “has no plans at the moment” to ine tervene in the steel dispute but may change his mind. : | Government labor officials felt {that presidential

almost certain rejection of Union President Philip Murray's latest ultimatum. Mr. Murray said flatly after day-long conferences yesterday that his men will walk out on schedule unless steel companies

- ns ee + deve zee Bell Pension Fund ’ Controller,

Phillip L. Bayt, told board mem.he was “somewhat disap- Attack d f Si “I would have liked to have e or 128 lseen our budget stand as it was’ Mr. Bayt said. “I thought we pre|sented a good, honest and clean budget. 1 don’t think: we could hav

ve honestly made any reduc-| The state kept its legal guns tions. However, we will make it trained on the $1 billion pension fused to work because benefit

Interest Held Ample To Meet Payments

{fund of the American Telephone

h : — i arefully a Co., before the Public Service : | Presbyterians will erect a new hoard to consider care Across Nation |$150,000 church on the former budget item for $9675 which city| Commission. ‘ | ew. Naval Ordnance plant playground officials hoped to use in setting up

William E. Steckler, public counselor, made it plain to the

“This is a. step in the right PSC that he was not attacking While, Presbytery, direction.” Mrs. Noling told the the pension system of Indiana blaze,” Fire Dis- meeting last night in Hopewell hoard, “With the establishment Beil or AT. & 'T. ‘as such, but /®'? mine operators who refused patcher F. J Spainhower decided authorized the Rev. R. E."Muel-|o¢ 5 city personnel bureau We questioned seriously the piling up '® continue the royalty payments, ler. Indiana Synod executive sec- p,q to streamline the operation of the fund to “larger than it|

{need be” to meet retirement de- | mands. | He charged that the interest

accept a 10-cents- per - hour {insurance-pension {by a presidential fact- | : 1 ct finding ! o Coal Strike Runs On | Company officials aiready turned that proposal down od and were ready to .say “no” /again. But Mr. Ching told them

to think it over and give him °

their answer today. Government intervention was also expected to be necessary to end the coal shutdown which be{gan yesterday, when some 480, hard and soft coal miners re.

{payments from the United Mine

As chairman of the Mayor's &. Telegraph Co. today in the por r® Welfare and Retirement |eity citizens’ advisory committee rate increase hearing of its sub-| Mrs. Alfred Noling urged the sidiary, Indiana Bell Telephone!y

Fund had’ been suspended. John L. Lewis stated that the uspension was = necessary bee cause. the operators had defaulted on the regular 20-cent-a-ton pay ru 2 lhe fund. uefield, W. Va., meanUMW leaders: resumed contract negotiations with Southe

Coal-hauling railroads bore the’ {brunt of spreading effects of the {mine shutdown. More than 26,000 |rallroaders’ were scheduled for

{alone on the pension fund, held vy [Urloughs this week with many

{the Bankers’ Trust Co., New York

A hearing for oral arguments already meets 98 per cent of its E. pension requirements. Parker, convicted on a secondThe Presbytery constituted a degree murder charge, was et;

Stresses Examination

On the stand was Dr. Lawrence |8. Knappen of Washington, D, C.,

Parker was sentenced to life 5 pengion expert and public -util-

{thousands mora probably due to lose their jobs if the miners’ (general work stoppage continues, | The operators’ 64 million-ton Stockpile was adequate for about 2 month ér two of normal industrial operations, but with |winter coming on, “a prolonged

: ” as" organization of the parish. The, rere Haute in 1048 for Killing |ities consultant. In his question. idleness in the coalfields land, O he was ‘told i ” . q could 0 en Nn d a O eantare uirk ha q BTSt unit will cost $50.000 and the pi." andlady, Mrs. Lillian Marie inc’ ur. Steckler brought out the|Bave drastic effects, ‘brought together the-two depart- Rev Mr. Mueller estimated the|jonnson. Mrs. Johnson diS-need for a detailed examination) N Ford Talks Continue ments, which operate on the same Kirk West, Presbytery mission- appeared Apr. 7, 1943, and a of the fund which he implied was. ®80tiations are set with

Being Built at 38th wave length. ary on leave from China, spoke : Mr. Spainhower then dispatched last’ night. The Rev. Charles hers.

Two more retail stores and a small kitchen fire. rye Court.

moderator, presided.

residential shopping ceater st Housewife Held

38th St, and Keystone Ave. in the I fall, it was announced today." In Extortion Case ° : * A 45-year-old Noblesville nouse- WINNIE Changes Title

Retail stores of Vonnegut, and Guarantee wife today was arrested by a

Earl Wilson says he's a failure because he doesn’t [Auto Supply and a branch of the deputy hy Sarai on Tcharge ‘Miss New Orleans’ Reveals She Is Mother, smoke a pipe . . . choice bits from Broadway. ...Pags 12 American National Bank = willy, "pans" Marie McNutt of Agrees to Alter It ‘to Mrs. New Orleans’

100-car motor caravan marks opening of new high-

apolis’ first motion picture theater ............Page 1 Tribe banks on Lint to tie up playoff tonight . .. Joe Williams . . . Jimmy Angelopolous takes up the subject of the Washington Continentals... .....Page 16 Read Frank Leahy ... you can even hear him moan ++. news of the big leagues .........v. ee... Page 17

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Other Features on Inside Pages

——— rw . TR emt ene | New Orleans” contest were that Her 215-year-old son is staying the hearing. The circular quoted Amusements 10 Forum ..... 14 Movies ..... 10 Society ..... 8 erected by Grinslade Construc- 6 a. m... 48 10 a. m... 62 the entrants be over 16 and ‘‘un- with his grandparents in Jack- Thomas P. Stephenson, A. T. & T. Bridge ..... 7 Hollywood .. 10 My Day .... 7 8ports .. 18, 17 tion Co. George Wilhelm is con-| 7 a. m... 49 11 a. m... 65 married.” son, Miss. Miss Greenfield said actuary, saying the

Fashions ,.. 7 Mrs. Mapn'rs <8 Radio ...... 4 Women's ... ¥ood sevnans 7. Marriage ves 8 ,

. | struction east of Keyst way link . . . Sovola, Leach, Othman ..........Page 1}{south on 38th st.

Anton Scherrer tells you about the opening of Indian-

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occupy a building now under con- gp R. 5, Noblesville, was placed NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 20 (UP)bond. She will be arraigned be-

A large lot at the rear will pro- fore Judge Robert C. Baltzell in |vide parking space for customers. gederal. Court Sept. 28.

Open in Mid-October Vonneguts_will open for busi- ran, district attorney, Mrs. Mc-|

to accept a new title—‘‘Mrs, New Orleans of 1949."

other two firms opening at a later to an Indianapolis woman threat-, date, ening to injure her reputation un- “ W | ‘The extension of services by less she paid $1000. sad ale the “My. New or {three organizations. marks the] Mrs. McNutt was indicted by a '®2P >. {11tlr Guarantee ‘store in Indian- federal Grand Juryalast week {apolis, the 10th Vonnegut retail after postal Inspector's Mdentified

protested.” -

{store in the city and the sec- her as the writer of the threaten- said she hoped that she and ‘Miss ago, when she was 17, to Jack Nieto could take the trip togeth- Greenfield, but divorced him a larized employees with an explan-

ation-of the pension testimony atithe charge when Dunwoody

ond" branch bank. opened by ing letter.

American National here. em emt meme | LOCAL TEMPERATURES

| er. The only rules in the “Miss year ago. . The new building is being

for a new local firemen who put out the Franklin Bruce, pastor of the| Parker appealed 2 Sutherland Prosbyaoria Churgh, trial before the Indiana Supreme sion payments are made to the Under strike threat today on a

Red-haired Darwin Greenfield, the war... one, facing in Marion County jail- under $1000 who won the “Miss New Orleans of 1949” contest and then disclosed

the telephone subscriber, He pointed out that the pen-

Bankers Trust Co., as trustee {and can never be recovered by the

Divorcee Beauty Contest “ri ie w be cued oy

Mr. Steckler probably will be I.. J. Dunnewold, equipment and building “engineer for Indiana | Bell. He will be questioned about the necessity for the vast build{ing and equipment undertaken by Indiana Bell since

Explains to Workers

skie has been observing Mother's Day for two years, today agreed y. charged that Indiana Bell,

through the A. T, & T. Pension

Betty Nieto, a shapely brunet who was No. 2 in the “Miss NeW. ¢,nq ‘wag contributing more than According to B. Howard Caugh- Orleans” contest, took Miss Greenfield's vacated title. Harry Batt was uting

' was needed to finance the retire-

ness in mid-October with the Nutt on April 11 fnalled a letter OPerator of PoRtehiaH Fain Beach i nree metghborhood beauty con- ment of its employees. and _sponsot of. the contest, [tests before she entered the ‘Miss cided to award duplicate prizes cow Orleans contest’ and nobody termination of what per cent of |

The state pressed toward a de-

{employees actually collect the re-

I" Actually, he said, Miss Green- tirement.fund, and whether that The jnain prize is a vacation field is “unmarriéd” according to per cent has remained. the same in Havana and Miss Greenfield jaw, She was married five years since the fund was set up,

Indiana Bell Co. today circu

expansion |

skeleton was later identified as peing collected at the expensé of \Crthern coal operators at White

| Sulphur Springs tomorrow A A nd |at -Betroit, negotiations resumed

ord Motor Co. proposal of $50-a-month company - financed pene sions for 115,000 C10 [sions sor 0 United Auto | UAW President Walter Reuth {turned down Ford's bid for Fad

{by serving notice that his auto.

{workers would strike Sept. 29 |uniess ree, 5 jie a8 ment Is reached by The $50 offer, ‘exclusive Social Security benefits, was - vealed by the union yesterday. A {union spokesman said the amount Iwas based on UAW estimates. . | ——— (Cha Dismissed pine! Blind Singer policeman who arres [blind street singer William Ellis,

2900 Adams St, yesterda fatled ohaahnd Bt. Yesterday fated

{ |

intervention

roposal made

against Mr. Ellis was EE ;

Judge Joseph Howard disroissed Alexander

5 Inside Indpls. 13 Novel ...... 11 Weather Map 15 {ractor for the Editorials ,. 14 Leech ...... 13 Othman .... 13; Earl Wilson 12/1.cases were negotiated by Klein 7/& Kuhn and the Fred C. Scherrer “es 14, Your Job "., 4 Ca

construction.! 8 a. m... 50 17 (Noon) 63

Pa m..55 1pm. 66 ‘Ted C. Tucker) potion Gount . . . 50 per cu. yd.

¥

a

“'the rules a little more specific,’ about her marital status; it was pension requirements made no!

(Gar Moore, a spokesman for Batt, just a question of nobody asking difference to the company’s finan-| yesterday violation ‘sald, “But Miss Greenfield x clal status, yo. vie of

“Possibly we shéuld have made she hadn't tried to fool anybody ing or underestimating of future|the

. on downtown

wou, her.

ters, and their origin could not : : Federal mediation director Cyi . i |outstandin, kesman for the Minton to the Supreme Court, bama St 3 be; pinned dm; ‘smaller Ga was elected {D3N a. cont In the copity governs i Phair own Ti 8. Ching said, however, he tnd ; He had already learned his lesson for today. The Czech Communist press in- ‘ 8 ment levy which will be 64 cents 2 (would “keep ‘em talking” to the ~despite a plea by administration, __—"¢ 4G ATEAGY CArNEd 3 TH Ji ltensified its campaign against/President of the Fourth General SO" CIV Tou Moroney rate for|d0ing” and they indicated they| JUNC. ep HE ‘officials i for: imtediate . aps re; Omas &CCOmMpPa~ .4raitors in our midst.” ig EL rows the state government remained| would make mo attempt to Setis,"s meeting hers to hear thelr

®

EE Tey

i

Again “settle pemt of the stud

‘_y