Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 March 1950 — Page 11

person f. essage w 91st Year

1S THE 10 SEED R LAWN

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THURSDAY, MAR. 9, 1050

—— :

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ Ll aR Se

job Because of Strange

Denied RB Toor v1 Far

Toreees Cite Achievéments. Pork Lovers Deny [E3L EE Eh = RE \in Answer to Jacobs Pigs: Are Dirly

essential mine etaliy’ nd has gus of thd | no If Junior wants & pet, try a pig;| constitutions for testing .b 7» Indianapolis Junior Chamber ot | acter building and is a part of

according to these enthusiasts |! foods. Ld Seesessscese ssersessessesessessssee-

Of Bureaucratic Fear

‘Note on Election Tal

~+ Former OSS Officer Caught Up in Web *

of Loyalty ‘Risks’

By PETER LISAGOR, Times Foreign Correspondent

guished war record has been fear here. The case of his man, “sign of the time

having a security or lo;

agencies apparently ‘taking no chances of even getting singed. Doe couldh't buy a job in government today, and he isn't! certain why. : Notation Blamed But a notation made by an election clerk in New York back! in 1936, when Doe was just 21, puts him among the damned,

Doe's story began in March|

1949, when he was approached| though he insisted he had never}

with a job offer by the chief of | the State Department's Office of! Intelligence Research.

ist” was incredible, he told the The official knew that Doe had! n : ) worked in that office in 1045-46, security officers. Whilé the in-

as an army reserve officer on| duty with Office of Strategic Services, the cloak-and- ~-dagger| agency during the war. Files For Position A settled citizen now, with a wife and three children, Doe! seemed like a solid det for the State Department job. At the de-| partment’s request, he filed ap-| plication papers on Mar. 15. In June, Doe was told that his security check was almost com-! pleted. He was advised to rent his home in New York and. pre-| pare himself for the move to! Washington. In July the Civil Service okayed| him as being eligible for a foreign affairs officer status at! $8100 a year. Then on Aug. 6, he| was abruptly advised his ap-| pointment had been canceled “for|

~ administrative reasons: ot Doe promptly went to Wash-

ington, protested the action and asked for an explanation. He got none, but he ut he was asked if he had

alse Teeth

25pication of scientific new kes loose FALSE TEETH | ef a TRY IT on

back guarantes. 59c & 98c of of druggists. Ask for DENTUR-EZE.

Hooks Dependable Drug. Stores feo

are: ficers-they decid

ji listed by the clerk, was the nota-

{officer called to say he had to

called George Doe for convelencs, is a

It Rlustrates how far backward the bureaucrat, charges in Congress, is leaning —— bureaucrat, stung by Red

these days to avold suspicion of ever Sted a Communist petition led

{reopen the Investigation.

| _-Two months later, on Oct, 10> Martin Cddel, publisher of Tele-|

{Doe was called to Washington {and confronted with a photostat of a ‘page from the New York registration books of 1938. In the space beside his name, | Where party conferences are

tion: “Comm.” There was no {record of how Doe had voted, al-|

voted for anybody. but Roosevelt and Truman in his life.

The implication of “Commu-

vestigation continued,’ Doe went New York and interviewed election officials. Slips Are Burned Party preference in New" York {is marked on a separate slip of paper when a voter registers: It {is entered on the book by a clerk| after the election. A year later, {the slips are burned. Doe could prove nothing, He iasked if mistakes were ever made in transposing the party preferences and was told “yes, not often, but sometimes.” He reminded the department he had applied at ita Yequest, had | lost the savings of years waiting for the investigation to end, had

fly

ge From Ready, Says Editor

Trade Paper Publisher Cites Technical and .

_ Financial Difficulties

By JACK MABLEY Times Special Writer

CHICAGO, Mar. 9—Color television won't be ready for the public for years.

vision Digest, told 400 television! executives:

system is ready, or even in early] prospect. 4 The two most highly publicized | color systems introduced to date are those of CBS and RCA. The {CBS system gives an excellent picture, but the five million .TV| sets -now in American’ homes would need mechanical changes to pick up the picture. ; The RCA system can be picked up in black and white on present sets, but the picture is inferior. Even if color suddenly did get approval from the FCC, Mr. Codel believes broadcasters would be reluctant to adopt it.

“Nobody in the deficit-ridden| television industry can afford | color,” he said.

Copyright, 950, The Indianapolis Times e Chicago Daily News

refused several other jobs, and felt entitled to an explanation. Regulations, he was told, forbade any more than what he was |

told. “7. TEpllog to Story La Doe's story has an epilog. A naval intelligence officer called him a few days ago asking if he'd be interested in an intellgence job. Somewhat hollowly, Doe said yes, but suggested that the Navy might be ifiterested in a dossier on him in the State Department. A short time later, the naval

withdraw the offer—no reason given,

Copyright, 1050, The India anolis Times d The Chicago Daily New

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—tAndrew Jacobs’ label of “moral

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bankruptcy” and cited a public] - jachievément record to prove its case. In a letter to the Indiana congressman, the local Junior Cham-| ber of Commerce, through John T. Sutton, president, éxpressed regret at the “unfortunate wording”

Speakers’ “Bureau has appeared] | before 12,000 people,

our contribution to the prevenrtion of juvenile delinquency. “Since September of 1949, our |

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the recent critical need for coal; in the city. {the adoption of those recomThe letter follows: jmendations and have speakers in

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