Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1950 — Page 2

BE nt

——dtator catted another conference

wor theited Chew quickly Fou

PAGE 2

11,000 Ready To Jump Gun In Phone Tieup

Walkout Won't Disrupt Service Before Wednesday

. CHICAGO April 22 (UP)—The nation headed into a week of cru-| cial labor disputes today. { Telephone installation workers were ready to jump the gun on a nationwide telephone . strike Monday. | And railroad firemen poised to strike on four big rail systems Wednesday. Meanwhile: hope vanished for a quick settlement of the 88-day-—.old- Chrysler strike. A .federal-me-

a |

§

today but said further meetings appear useless because the company and unions have reached a ; “hopeless deadlock.” a. Both the railroad and telephone strikes are scheduled to start next Wednesday but officjals of the C10 Communications & Workers in negotiations at New York announced that 11.000 Western Electric installation workers

gide issue is reached Run. Plan No PFickets

~ ~ " . I » ” Th slephone strike W \e8- ° aie one, Rt Eanes. City Officials Puzzled

21,000 long lines operators in 40

t 55 Da and sales > . maees mioe ene Qver Source of Action

iispute with installation workers

failed after a four-hour meeting Mysterious ‘John Kelly’ Would Block é ut further attempts were . . $day, But further atuemp Completion. of Long-Sought Project Walkouts already had begun The Great Municipal Mystery puzzled city officials and construcamong the installation workers. tion industry figures alike last night However, if all installation work It involved the reasons back of the filing of the suit seeking to ers walk out Monday there still block the University Heights sewer project. would be no major disruption of Mayor Feeney, other city officials, University -Heights resident

telephone service hecause the and contracting firms were baffled as to who filed the suit and why union said no picket lines would The only man who would know;

be ow oge be set up and other telephone Attorney Frank A. Symmes Sr workers will continue on the job who filed the suit, was out of the 0 fl iron But last

until. Wednesday at least. city until tomorrow,

The walkouts were precipitated Week he would not disclose the 4 by an alleged “lockout and firing” identity of the mystérious “John 0 dl es oming

of about 100 installation workers Kelly” “in whose name the suit : at South Bend, Ind. was filed. pn Hays and Ingram But at Indianapolis, telephone + The suit alleged that the 1949: ; : company officials denied there amendment to the sta‘e sewer To Be at Press Event was a lockout. They said “100 law which permits the Indianap- Will H , Hays, former Republiworkers had sta ged a 25-day ols. Warks Board to build all type cag national chairman, and Adm. work stoppage, refusing to cross ©f sewers, was unconstitutional. Jonas H. Ingram will attend the muddy fields to work on televis-| But interested parties, particu- Indianapolis Press Club's fourth fon towers under construction larly Heights residents who have annual Gridiron Show May 18 in across Northern Indiana. sought sewers for years tried to the Murat Theater Meanwhile, CW A President Peer further into the reasons ‘for Ole! scent Behe noes 4! Joseph Beirne offered to settle all the attempt to block the project clude Wayne Coy, chairman o

the Federal Communications 25 : 4 : ’ 4 Sewer was n ~ » of the union's contract dis-/- Contract to build the sewer wa Commission; Oswald Ryan, Civil

s, putes by arbitration, but officlals awarded to the Massa Construc- i. Board: former Gov.

of -the company's tong “lines de- tion Co. Ft--Wayne “on a bid of i, op 11 “Green of Illinois; Fred partment rejected the proposal. $247,021.25 as against the engl- Ferguson, president of Acme-NEA The negotiations bogged down Neer's estimate of $248,821. Un- Service, New York: Donald B. and negotiators started discus- successful biddérs were two Indi- Hoover, president of Bozell & sion of side issues not directly 2napolis firms, Thompson Lion. Jacobs Advertising Agency, New concerned with wages, the main struction Co, with a pid of $259, York; Walker Stone, editor of the issue. 729, and LCommbia Construction Scripps-Howard Washington BuIn the rail digpute, there ap- C0 $270,221. reau; Chester W, Cleveland, Inpeared to be little hope of head- Meanwhile, the Massa Co. con- giana Society; ‘Herb Graffis, SunIng off a walkout by 18,000 fire- tinued to start the job in the Uni- Times. Basil Walters, Chicago men and enginemen against four versity Heights district, moving pajly News; Don Maxwell, Chirail systems comprising seven!in bulldozers, cranes and pouring cago Tribune; John MuoGee, In-

major roads and numerous sub. concrete inte junction chambers./giana Society,” ‘and’ Wark A.

sidiaries. Preliminary hearing on the suit! Brown, president: of the Harris Officials of the brotherhood of will be held May 8 In Circuit Tryst & Savings Bank, all of Chilocomotive firemen and engine-/Court and in the meantime, the cago, . men rushed plans for the walk- Ft. Wayne company plans to go

out at 8 a. m. Wednesday in each/ahead in the absence of any stop IT He om lorders to the contrary. Franklin Rector

. ~~ Coming to Butler

| Franklin E. Rector will join the faculty of the Butler Uni-

“T{"as assistant professor of rural church. . ~~ Prof. Rector received his bachelor of arts degree at Phillips University, Enid, Okla. and a masters. from Oklahoma A & M College. He is completing his doctorate at the \ University of v * Wisconsin. { Prof. Rector |. has

been

& M College and the University of Wisconsin, and ; has served rural pastorates for 12 vears. He was a chaplain in the Army from 1940 to 1946 and saw service in Sicily, Ttaly, France and Germany. He received the Bronze Star, “urple Heart and eight battle stars He is a member of Pi Gamma Mu, Alpha Kappa Delta and. Psi Chi fraternities the Ameriesn Sociological Society and the Rural Sociological Society

learning to dance is fun when you learn in an Arthur Murray Club Class. It costs so much less, too. So plan to enroll in one of these classes now. You'll he amazed and

4 In Family Among Six Dead in Auto Crash

A special Pay-As-You Go Plan is now in effect. For as alittle as $3.00 a week you ; can learn all the latest steps, become an expert dancer at Arthur Mur ray's. So don’t wait. Come in today.

3

22 (UPJ- Six .persons, including four memhers of a fairmount, W Va, family and a relative were Killed tonight in a head-on automobile collision on U. 8S. Route 119, 14 miles solth of here - One of the dead was Catherine Brown, 27. a blind singer who had

ARTHUR MURRAY 221, N. Penn, ® FR-2668 2'!!oned here today for a pari — - # :

learn “The Arthur Murray Way." And then watch those . Invitations come your way, Come in now. Make arrangements before the classes get all filled up.

in a minstrel show

A suit has been filed to block construction of the University Heights sewer project, but in the will walk off the job meantime work goes on pending the hearing May 8. Photo shows Barney Massa, president of the Monday unless settlement of a Massa Construction Co., Ft. Wayne, talking with workmen on job at Southern. Ave. and Pleasant

2 Local Coeds Win Honors at Purdue

Suzanne Williams, 5859 Forest

Crittenden Ave. have been elected to offices. of Associated Women

Miss Williams was elected ju-

versity School of Religion Sept.

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along with former Communist Editor Louis F. Budenz again—

ax | WASHINGTON, Apr. 22 (UP) _. |—8en. Bourke B, Hickenlooper, {(R. Ia.) said tonight that new and “very mysterious” develop-| ments have come to light in the | Amerasia decument theft case. ; That is the case which Sen. {Joseph Bs McCarthy, (R. Wis.), | has declared will reveal a “most | important Soviet espionage” net- ¥ | work when the full story comes |

{| A Senate Foreign Relations

{of the new Amerasia develop

“Mr. Hickenlooper, a member of are Dick {the subcommittee, told reporters Baldwin {that “some elements not hereto-| iter, fore known publicly” have be-; : | come available.” |

subpenaed an

|

and Janet M. Olson, 6002 on the Owen Lattimore case.

board chairman and Miss Newspaper Staff, and John J. Francis Payne, who lived there, exploded like a bomb according ing will be held at 5704 E. WashOlson. assistant judicial board Huber, who claims 10 years serv- was not at home when the ex-|/to persons who heard the noise. chairman. Both girls are junior ice as an FBI undercover inform- plosion and fire occurr students at the university.

The

Bella V. Dodd, former Commu-

the New York Journal American home.

Oil Drum Blast new witnesses will be Damages Home Here

contests at Butler, ,

sm Field Day yesterday.

The event attracted 350 pupils both of Manual High School. from 34 Indiana high schools.

New

Fowler, Bloomington, sports writer; Kenneth , Broad Ripple High School advertising copy writer, and Joyce Randall, Bloomington, feature

Fifteen high school journalism|took part in a radio broadcastfirst; | He referred to the controversial pupils were named winners of over WISH. and long dormant 1945 Amer- “on the spot” asla case involving the theft of {, h 7 hundreds of secret diplomatic and | f military documents. The Iowa Senator said he is requesting the committee to subpena “several witnesses.” Woman Subpenaed

|, Bloomington, editorial writer; Janet

Barbara Baurley, [Ripple High School, second; and Peggy Bridges, Ft. Wayne, third, niversity‘’s 17th annual Journa- Wayne, first; Martha Sherman, Winning copy writers in the 'second; and Joan Emhardt, third, advertising contest were Janet Baldwin, Broad Ripple, first; EmJoyce Randall, Bloomington ily Byers, Lafayette, second; and They attended a *“doughnut/High School, was first in the fea- Carolyn Dessauer, Broad Ripple, dance,” and joined in clinics oniture story contest. Suzanne Berry third. year books, readership surveys, was second and Duck Lugar The subcommittee, meanwhile, women's page news and sports third, both of Shortridge High School, was first in sports write ousted woman coverage. A film, “Democracy’s|/ School. Communist leader and two e€x- Library”, FBI men to testify Tuekday— Times, was sho

| Winners in the news story dision were Jane Heestand, Ft.

Dick Fowler, Bloomington High

ing; Dan Wakefield, Shortridge, York Editorial contest winners were second, and Paul Harbaugh,

wn, and the pupils'Kenneth: Goodall, Bloomington, Broad Ripple, third.

{the yard too close to the drums caused the explosion.

GOP Clubs to ‘Meet

Roof and the side of the build: The Irvington Republican Club _ An oil drum explosion yesterday jng were burned. First oil drum 20d the Irvington Womens’ Rex nist expelled from the party last in the rear of 1128 Bellefontaine exploded and set the house on Publican Club will meet at 8 p. m, Students -at Purdue University. june: Lawrence Kerley now on St. damaged a converted garage fe. Shooting as high as a two tomorrow, All candidates in Marstory building, the second drum ion County are invited. The meet-

ington 8t. Frank Haugh and Mrs, It was/ Robert Hadden, 1121 College Tyler Oglesby are the presidents

ant within the Communist Party. believed that a fire started in Ave. is the owner of the house. of the two organizations.

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47 MONUNENT CIRCLE

If you « for public of the May 2 p Two-thc With th brother prec

“Bat, unfor ~ ately, depen

you look at i odd vacancie Someone | pointed. - Even the predicting v Glenn Fu Republican boasts that power the Bradford re ization. County The count} ever, is “ver, nis said last have too mu ning.” Louis Flet treasurer nc activities in quarters, sali fight, all we we'll win.” Although + rang out a headquarters leaders priv: of Mayor Fe: political part The mayo down the c waged prim:

~pifig up his-a “organization

dio talks bl

Democrat po

Hint “Ce Reports of promise des Feeney and leaders are s Party politic] ty machine Cunningham mayor. Unless it two or three

. Feeney will |

back all the said ‘about th in his own 1 Pritc The judici: Indianapolis week was a judges runni White-hair judge of Supt his usual fo lead and Ww most votes date. The hottes Republican Edwin Hae:

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