Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1950 — Page 1
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i ST ———— Mostly far and warmer tomorrow. High today, 80; low tonight, 55. High tomorrow, 85.
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SUNDAY, JUNE 11, 1950
Entered as Second-Class Mstter at Postotfice "ndianapolis. Indians.
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Ringside Seat in Russia ... No. 1
Orthodox Church Just
__As Close a Red Ally As
It Was to Czar Rulers
Peter the Great, Imperialist Monarch, .Added to List of Kremlin's Historic Heroes
(Editor's Note: This is first of five “articles on Russia's
preparation for war, as viewed by an Observant European states-
—..man-behind-the-Iron--Curtain,)-——
By DR. NICHOLAS NYARADI, Ex-Finance Minister of Hungary ON A HOT Sunday-afternoon I stood close to Premier Stalin in the immense Dynamo Stadium of Moscow. .My box was next to the official box of the Soviet government, from which Stalin and the other 13 members of the Politburo reviewed the parade on the Day of Physi- : cal Culture Moscow's greatest sport festival. - -‘The -80,000-spectators-“and 15,000 - participants
greeted Stalin with deafen- | ing cheers while a band of | 1000 white-clad musicians played the almost endless |
The enthusiasm of the . crowd reached its peak
when a boy and a girl each |
about 6 years old and each carrying a large bouquet of flowers for Stalin, started up the steps leading to the government box. They were to pass be-
Dr. Nyaradi tween two lines of picked
officers of the MVD, the dread Soviet secret police.” -. _As the of the spectators saw only
“that. Stalin: accepted the flowers and embraced the chil-
dren. But I, from m e t, saw that two ren To also i
MVD officers, under the to climb the high stairs, bouquets, - ooking for any _ flowers. x spent seven 2 months i in Moscow in frustrating negotiations over a Russian reparations claim of F S200 million against. my alive Hungary.
ne carefully shook the xplosives or Poison in the
IN. THE THREE troubled years of pomt-war history, from 1946 to the end of 1048, as Under Secretary of Finance and then Minister of Finance of the Hungarian _governmient, I had a ringside seat from where. 1 was able to observe closely many of the Sqviet moves toward | world domination. As a non-Communist member of a Fingafiin coalition government, I watched the Soviet government violate all the obligations it assumed at the Yalta conference. During my negotiations I met top Soviet officials such as Deputy Prime Minister Vyacheslov Molotov, Deputy Prime Minister Anastas Mikoyan and Marshal Klimenti Voroshilov. In my strenuous days in Moscow, 1 became well acquainted with those leading members of the almighty Politburo and had my eyes opened to the ruthless aims, methods and tactics of the present leaders of the Soviet Union. tried to compromise with the Russians, as many
other leaders of the unhappy countries of Eastern and |
Central Europe tried to do. Sooner or later, all of us came to the realization that in the final analysis “compromise” means unconditional surrender to the Russians, » » » » » LJ] THE INEVITABILITY of a final showdown between e “Socialist” and “Capitalist” Worlds is the fundaI have closely observed the Stalinist interpretation of this theory in the political, psychological and military sectors. When I visited public schools in Moscow, the spectacle of 8-year-old boys and girls using tommy guns, or learning how to clean a road of hidden mines,
(Continued on Page 2—Col. 2) » . » .
=
+ n-July,
i Could Feel the Vibration
departments, sheriff's office and
had gone up in dust. Nobody seemed to think of men from Mars. But as the crump of blasting powder ‘continued for half an | “hour, those who heard I reached just about every other | conclusion. ; | Charles Humbert, 1122 South- | eastern Ave, was one of the | first to call. f “I spent four years in the | Army,” he said, and indicated |
eT tha Al — 4
state police headquarters.
Frantic voices asked fearfully if it was an air attack, if one of the city’s gas tanks had Po if the Naval Ordnance Plant
| he knew a boom when he heard ne. “I could feel the vibrations in the air. They sounded like “they were thirée or four miles | away and had some earth back
| of them,” He explained.
or — JOHN WARE, 909 Marion | Ave. thought the explosion | was at the Naval Ordnance | Plant east of the city.
3 Killed, 7 H
‘2 Die When Their Car Rams Into Tree
Txittea” ANAT EeVer otHers fijtred, {one oritically, in highway crashes, lin Indiana late yesterday. The dead are: { Walter R. Schaffer, 28, Elkhart, William 8S. Calentine, 26, Mish-| awaka. | Frank Arnoid, 74, R. R. 2, Ray.
Mich. Maymie Cripe, 59, Ft. Wayne. Mr, Schaffer and Mr, Calentine! died instantly when their car left| Ind. 23 near Granger and hit a tree. They were returning from at picnic at Christiana Lake. ~The car-was sc badly crumpiéd;
Mr, was killed on Ind. 120, one mile east of Fremont. His car collided head-on with one operated by Max W. Forker, 20, R. R. 2, Brownson, Mich. Jack Staffor; 17, Fremont, suffered neck injuries and William Palmerton, 17, also of Fremont, suffered a brain concussion. Both were taken to Lamers Hospital, Angola. - Car Hit Broadside Mr. Meyn died when a vehicle jdriven by his son, Harold, 35, |Cedar Rapids, was struck broad{side by the car of Clayton Cooper, | 157, of 3510 N. Pennsylvania St. state police said. | The Towa vehicle was struck on Ind. 30 when Mr. Cooper pulled out of a side road near the intersection of Thd. 13 in Kosciusko {County. The wife of the: victim | suffered chest injuries. Death of Mrs, Cripe and critical linjuries to her husband, Ora Cripe,| |59, Ft. Wayne, came in a three-|
{car collision near Strawtown in| War
Hamilton County. { Their car was struck head- -on! |by one driven by Argil Clara Mar-| shall, 41, of 1215 N. Gale St, after it was hit broadside by the! vehicle of George Bayley, Ander-| 20m. and knocked into the path of the Marshall car at Ind. 37 and {County Rd, 435. ' Three Cars Smashed i The three cars were so badly] | damaged that police were unable | ito determine. in {three other injured were riding.| {Taken to a Noblesville hospital were Elmer Johnson, 16, Arcadia; {Ray Lewis, 19, Elwood, and Jack | Lewis, 17, also of ‘Elwood. I Mr. Cripe was taken to St, Vincent's Hospital here in critical { condition.
Times to Bring Readers Account’ Of Natural Birth
® A baby born by natural childbirth — without anaesthetic—will be. told in The Times in a series of | ‘articles by an Indianapolis housewife. ® Starting next Mrs. Louis Mahern, 1505 E. Kelly Bt. her personal experience with natural childbirth | + + «+ including the hour her new baby is born. ® Mrs. Mahern, who has borne ‘four other -children, will tell of the exercises she takes, her diet, her daily routine leading up to the natural birth. : @®8he will keep Times readers advised as she : prepares to bring her new child into the world—
Sunday,
@ Mrs. Mahern’s series of stories is one that EVERY woman, EVERY girl, EVERY man should read . . . for better un:0f mother-
Henry Meyn, 67, Cedar Rapids,
| nosed it as sort.”
{ on the near North Side.
1 smoke. + -
crn RUMBLING. explosions -over-Indtanapotis-tast-might-brought— — “ARTISTS MINE Frags a deluge of phone calls to The Times, Also flooded were the switchboards at the police and fire
“thunder of some
Someone at St. feared it was a gas tank. '
People living on the West Side sald they could see the flashes that accompanied the blasts. i Mrs. Valley Reitel, 1037 Chadwick St, was afraid a chemical plant had gone up in
» » » THE TIMES staff set about | plotting . the reports: as: they 8 came in. from different pans
‘What-a World—for Women—
Biggest Trouble Is His Flat Chest
I'M tired . .. 20 iv tired.
=
Four men and a woman were By PV ’. CLIFFORD THUBMAN, | !
It took me exactly 9 hours and IT
44 minutes to become a WAC again, My feet hurt. I am tiréd all over. I am tired of having strange women poke at me, They told me I pooch out at the wrong place and pooch in where I shouldn't. : My girdle doesn't fit. Thesé they call supporters hang down behind my knees. I kept
telling them that T Would dispense §
{a wrecker pulled it apart before with sto the bodies could be removed. | They oa ne another gadget
I didn't like it FRR es 2 @ AFiny Take: they said. oh My shoes are too long and too wide. Moreover, they squeak When I walk. Right Cute, Too I have a -bountiful supply of clothing, however, and now I'm wondering what to do with it, how to put it on. After all day at Ft. Harrison {and joining the WAC reserves, I got more clothes (under and {outer) than most civilians ever own. They're right cute things, too, {f you know how to wear 'em. Oh, yes, 1 guess I'd better tell you what's behind all this. You see, it's a two-day conference of Indiana Fifth Army re-| servists at Ft. Harrison. Some 56 of the former WACs—! and I-—lined up yesterday morn-| {ing for a refresher course on mili-| {tary procedure and such. These! WACs are all veterans of World II. They are in the reserve co to assist in enlisting recruits tol
| (Continued on Page 2 —Col. 1)!
Good: Weather
Predicted Today
Hoosiers were promised good | weather for their Sunday joy]! Skies will be: mostly fair over, the state today and temperatures are to be a little higher tomorrow, High temperatures of 72 to 78 are expected today in northern] Indiana, and 78 to 82 ‘in the south. “Most of the state enjoyed fair, weather yesterday after showers
{and thunderstorms, which start-
ed Friday night, poured as much
{as 3 inches of rain in many areas.
Forecasters--said Indianapolis would have a pleasant peak tem- | perature this afternoon of 80, followed by 85 tomorrow. The mer-
| cury will slip to about 55 tonight.
HUNT MISSING AIRMEN LONDON, June 10 (UP)-—8ev-| enteen United States Air Force {planes criss-crossed the North] Sea from dawn until dark today
{fn a futile search for four men - — A Will “write missing fromthe B-20 that shot! A Job ‘Well Done—
{itself down three days ago. All {four were believed dead.
[POPE “TO SEE LEOPOLD ~FATICAN CITY, June 10 (UP) | vatican .sources said today | | that exiled King Leopold of the! Belgians will { Pope Pius XII Monday or Tues-|
but -hot as’ a chief of state.
| HEADS HOOSIER DAV
| ELKHART, June 10 (UP)— with pride over competing SUC | ceitute
| agencies | ‘blasts. : { The reports pinpointed on W, 16th" 8t. and Harding St. That's | where Victory Field is located. | blew “up” | > ment. opened a page of the late James Forrestal's secret diary today. to.reveal-that he tsix suspects in the 1945 Amerasia document theft case.
200 N, Mount...
of “the ¢lty. Taw enforcement | began locating the
And this is what the town. The Harlem Globetratiers were meeting the Brooklyn Cuban Giants, They were cele-
Cubana. They lost, » to 1.
Mere. Man Had Best Organize His Bul geIn State Traffic And Drop Reserve as He Joins WAC's
Times Staff Photographer,
These skirts are the Wdarndest" Som. +» + never fit,
On the Inside
Of The Times
First Section
5 Little news stories “About People”
Page
® Herron Art School students exhibit work What does it cost to run for office? Read Noble Read 10
| Libraries round up youngsters
Open road beckons Hoosier motorcyclists
. Second ‘Up to the minute sports news {Indiana's “Worst Poorhouse”
what vehicle! rides, golf and other amusements, | Our Fair City, World Report, Washington Calling. Vacationland on your doorstep
for reading club 12
Section
Lest Russian
, Sought to Bar Arrests
What Blow Up the Town?" eR ley
s Take
Truman Overruled Navy Chief's Fears And Ordered Suspects Taken in Custody
WASHINGTON, June 10
The department disclosed
Soviet Arming
(UP)~—The Justice Departs
tried-to-delay-the-arrest of
that it has a copy of an entry
" SRE at get-together with Mr, Forrestal ‘made in the diary on May 28, 1945. i reworks
But all that blew up was the |
Truman Raps
The then Secretary of the {Navy had written that he in« |tervened in the Amerasia case .| because he feared the arrests and
the attendant publicity might jeopardize the San Francisco con=
[ference at which. the United Nae. __. |
tions was being formed
Charges Kremlin Prepares for War - By MERRIMAN SMITH
United Press White: House Reporter ST. LOUIS, June 10 (UP)=
| paring for war.” But he sald their
® tains are leading Russia down a
borders
President Truman charged today that “Russian “leaders are ‘pre-
“ominous tactics” are being offset “by the growing strength of} the free world.” In his most detailed indictment of Russian leadership, the President charged that Boviet Chief-
road to armed conflict by stead-
Mr. Forrestal explained that he
|also was afraid the result would
be “to greatly embarrass” Presis
dent Truman in his dealings with
Soviet Premier time.
Stalin at that
Truman Steps In
ordered the six suspects arrested after Mr. Forrestal had inter- ; vened. But three of them sever were indicted, two got off with fines, and the indictment against the sixth, was quashed. o The arrests were based on the seizure of hundreds of confi dentiai and secret government documents in the offices of the
fly increasing her military might while the rest of the world is!
: cutting its armed ‘strength.
Can't Afford War He said the Russian Anny is
ed merely for protection of of Soviet He charged Russian ,
Earlier, at a special memorial service for the dead of both world wars, the president said “we cannot afford another world
(Continued on. Page 2-—Col. 4)
3 Die, 20 Rescued Off Sinking Yacht
Survivors Afloat LONG BEACH, Cal, June 10
(UP) — Twenty men forced. to
magazine Amerasia, edited by Philip Jaffe. Jaffe, who got oft with a was described in
diary as having | a
a he ow Justice Department sald
sistant to ta time of the Amer : ‘Copy to Committas Presumably the Justice. ment obtained that copy for use of the federal grand in New York which Is gating communism and ‘the Amerasia Case. = (Mr. Correa himself refused to discuss the notes with reporters in New Yok: But he said he had given them to the Justice Depart ment for grand dury consideration.) : Another copy of the diary ens try also has been given to Hde«ward Morgan, counsel for the Senate Foreign Relations sub committee which is investigating the Amerasia case as part of a
{abandon their sinking yacht while
5 on a fishing trip were rescued to-| night by the Coast Guard after!
{splashing around {nh the Pacific| | for more than two hours Three of them died. {
T h 13 si he homeward - bound yacht,
gnal Hill, suddenly started to| - sink while 15 miles out in the Pacific half-way between Cain
15 to 19 lina Island and Long Beach. Em25 ployees of the Paramount Steel
27
Third Section
Patty finds out about baseball
Also Junior Horse Show, You
Capers, bridge, canasta, Katy
for women,
Fourth Section
ir Trip Abroad, Capital Atkins, other features
North Side Realtors set 25-year home sale record .
Also other real estate news, Week in Business,” “Outlook | About, People Automobiles Amusements Births, Deaths, Events... Business ......c:ser00. 45-47 Crossword Editorials Erskine Johnson Fashions Forum ... Gardening
Harold Hartley’ s “This n the Nation,’ Mrs. Mannérs
Real Estate ....oev04..45
Weather Map .oovecevees Earl-Wilson
Blind, Deaf Boy fo Receive High Honor From College
NEW YORK, June 10 (UP)=A blind and deaf boy will be
Robert Joseph Smithdas, 24,
| in.-Brooklyn.
Mr. “Smithdas was bursting
be received by graduated from college with honors tomorrow.
thrust into a werld of darkness
| day as “an important person” | and silence when he was only 5 years old, will be awarded a bache-| confined to his bed here, suffered {lor of arts degree in English. cum.laude, _at St. John’s University! s “pulmonary ‘embolism™ at rioon
os with spinal meningitis. He went to school at Perkins Infor the deaf-blind in
Clarence Monroe, Hartford City, cessfully with classmates who Watertown, Mass,, where he mas-
{was elected ‘today to succeed could see and hear and do their tered the art of communication|; -i Ward Anderson of 85tith'Bénd as! homework in half the time it matana State Commander of the takes a blind person. | Disabled American Veterans. !
PREXY GETS THE MUMPS HAVERFORD; Pa. June 10 (UPy~Gilbert F. White, 38, pres-| ident of Haverford College, missed i exercises
He is believed 10 be the Tirst {man with this double handicap {to earn a college degree—and to {do so with honors.
through lip-reading by placing his hand on the speaker's mouth. Through hard work, he came to the Industrial Home for the Blind, in Brooklyn, where. he {Hves. He learned to hand-tool
29 forced
Corp., who had chartered the| yacht for a fishing outing, were to jump into the cold! waters of the Pacific, ¥ : Spotted by Plane Hastily donned life belts kept | them afloat, They clung to a rope’ | 80 they would keep together. One of them who got separated from
=the others was spotted bya planed
and a Coast Guard cutter rounded | him up along with the rest of the group. Joseph Robinson, 43, Long|
broad inquiry into. charges of jcommunism in the State Depart. ment.
Several Republicans, notably - Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy of Wis | consin, have accused the ade | ministration of trying to’ ‘“whitee | wash” the Amerasia affair,
The diary entry presumably will ibecome a major issue when the subcommittee resumes its hear. ings on Monday.
Yoiced Concern : The ‘diary note said Mr, Correa informed Mr. Forrestal on May |28, 1045; that the Amerasia ars Tests were to be made two anys later.
Mr. Forrestal expressed his cone cern over the affair to FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover and through Mr, Hoover to. Tom... Clark; then Ihead of the Justice Department's Criminal Division and now a Supreme Court Justice.
He also directed President Tru»
= Pregident Prem an hamwelt
port,
Beach, a co-owner and skipper of Man's Naval Aide, Capt. James K, the yacht, and William Pelletizr, Vardaman, to “see to it that the 24, Long Beach, were two of the President was informed in the dead. They were taken to New. Matter.” Cal., aboard a Coast Guard! cutter, and efforts to resuscitate of the Federal Reserve Board, des them were futile. nied on Wednesday that Mr. ForJimmy Roberts was dead when Testal had given him any such ine
Mr. Vardaman, riow a mémber or
Smuts’ Setback Glvia. Doctors Grave Concern
{he arrived in San Pedro, Cal, |
Coast Guardsmen reported.
PRETORIA; South Africa, June 10 (UP)—Flder Statesman Jan C. Smuts, 80, suffered a brieficollapse today and doctors and members of his family expressed
concern. over his condition. Marshal Smuts, who has been
and afterward his condition was described as far from satisfactory. Doctors were particularly Soncerned over his continued ough, which aggravated hist heart condition. ;
JOE'S FOSTER SON. we : i HOLLYWOOD, June 10 (UP)| —Capt. Gerald Welcker,. féste son of big-mouth comedian
|structions. He indicated that he {thought Mr. Forrestal's recollec-
ition of what happened had been
faulty.
On June 2, President
{overruled Mr. Forrestal's go-slow |advice and on June 6 the six Ame
erasia suspects were arrested.
Cabre Takes Out Ave
But Comes Back Blue LONDON, June 10 (UP) == Spanish Bullfighter Mario Cabre, 32, admitted sadly tonight that he may never get to marry Hollys wood’s Ava Gardner because “it takes two to be in.love.” - . La. Mr. Cabre, who took Miss Gardener out last night for ne first time since he arrived in Britain last week, said he ‘has
{admitted things looked." pretty black. . 3 Frank Sinatra, who “recently flew to Spain from the i?
Joe| States io _see te Miss Gardner,
Mr. Smithdas, son‘ of Joseph leather and make mops, dustérs E. Brown, was married here to-| {taken a
Smithdas;, a Pit
5 years “age” when he was'n
Mais Jn Ong Any.
ls pe SR
steel and rubber floor mats. He still day to Betty Eddy, a supervisor! fulfil a LE ment. today; worker, became blind and deaf holds the school record of. 65 of nurses at Cedars of Lebanon | while | Hospital, 4
+ film.
