Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1950 — Page 1

Boy Swimmer Revived After Rescue in Pool

Kenneth White, 8, of 1314 {Tuxedo St. was revived at Ei-| lenberger Swimming Pool today |

achers Offered Pay Settlement

Group Threatened ~To File Suit on Forced Retirement By CARL -HBENN Fifteen Indianapolis ‘public

|schoal teachers who {threat- to the boy whose face was blu

ened to sue the School City | {and who was not breathing Wie € was rescued. .icharging...illegal.. retirement |. poe pee “WEVING eqlIpHTent;

.|this spring today were of- rushed to the d to the pool, was not was not used, | fered a settlement.

ipiration. { The victim was taken to Genleral Hospital. | He was found in 41; feet of {water by Fred Hester, 13, another (swimmer. Head Lifeguard Ray Manning, |

ON BOWLS . Peace at long last © . . Antoine Kamars, 68 (left), his wife, Marya, 60, and Mrs. Anna Blaus, all | The Board of School Commis- OKs U.S. Handi I. S. Handlin y . of Latvia. : sioners came to tentative terms | SPAN CLEAN with Bell & Bell, law firm for the

teachers, on details of the offer late yesterday. Deadline for filing the suits was to have been today. Final agreement between teachers and School Board probably | will not be reached for several] days, according to attorneys.

Of Amerasia Case

Federal Grand Jury Balks Justice Aids

pattern set last year when nine ducted a “runaway” examination | sued the Board of School Com-| of the 1945 Amerasia stolen doc-

“Htinue” teaching and won their, it had found no evidence indicat-| cases before the Indiana Supreme | ing the Justice Department ‘was | Court. {remiss in its prosecution.” Details of the negotiations and | The 23-member grand jury dissettlement terms were not re-iclosed in a presentment that it vealed by Ellis Bell, teacher at- acted on its own authority in| torney, or G. R. Redding, School inquiring into the Amerasia case. | Board attorney. {It said it had not been able to Suits in Abeyance conduct as exhaustive an inquiry Mr. Bell, however, confirmed as it desired. that sults were in the offing] 08S “Responsible” should the commissioners refuse! The grand jury's

EIN: STORES

are 66 or more. {Federal Judge John W. Clancy

6, a

“Higop some time.” “which precipitated ° the AmerList of Teachers The 15 teachers ready suit included: Mrs. Ethel C, Swift, 982 Middle efameént documents found in the Dr., Woodruff Place; Miss Ruth|New York offices of Amerasia F. Stone, 2602 N. New Jersey St.; magazine were turned up in an Miss Rosana Hunter, 111 E. 16th OSS raid in March, 1945. St;; Burton A. Knight, 27 N.| The FBI on June 6, 1945, enSheffield Ave; Mrs. Era 8. tered the magazine's offices Kinney, 4073 Graceland Ave; equipped with arrest warrants Miss Louise A. Ross, 2428 Park but without search warrants, and Ave. {confiscated more of the docuMiss Gertrude Thuemler, 3043 ments. | College Ave.; Miss Olive R. Beck-| The grand jury said the FBI | ington, 437 E. 38th St.; Miss Ade- |’ ilaide 'B. Thale, 1825 N. Pennsyl|vania St; Paul Collins, 5137 | Washington Blvd.; Miss Edith C. { Griffith, 3025 N . Meridian St. Mrs. Mary T. Henderson, 1216 {| Oxford St.; Mrs. Helen Aufder- | heide, 4012 Broadway; Mrs. Lucy | C. Basterday, 935 Riley Ave., and

to file manner,”

Too young to remember day of infamy . .. Ruta Lunde, Maya levens and Brigita Cribersgis (left to fighl sg Joyoudly's in native Latvian costume.

Refugees Mourn For Baltic States

Recall War Terrors

At Ceremony Here By GALVY GORDON For a tortured moment terror reigned in the hearts of 200 men

bringing criminals to justice and| protecting national security. There, was’ no eviderce, the presentment said, that any official acted improperly in regard to the| delay in the arrests of the six persons accused in the theft of the documents.

| sembly which limits dismissal of {tenure teachers to reasons of. incompetency, insubordination, neglect of duty, immorality, decrease {Tn teaching positions or “good and sufficient cause.’

Guardsmen’s boots on the pavement outside brought back years of fear to Lithuanian, Estonian and Latvian displaced . persons observing mourning day for the Baltic states. The three-lainguage

Jerry Visits Home Briefly

| ents at home for a short time last

A later Teachers Retirement night, but was back in 8t. Vin. ceremony was held in First United | Law stated all teacherd of 66 cent's Hospital today. Lutheran Church, 701 N. Penn- His mother, Mrs. Ruby ~Dun-

gylvania St. | (Continued on Page 2 —Col. -1)

away, took him home for dinner Faces blanched, lips grew taut Away, IO aS and strong voices faltered in the . with Jus family at a Eajlers singing of the international Lu- Imes 0 0 IW Ie for & “Coke : ’ theran hymn, “A Mighty Fortress i ’

But the 7-year-old leukemia victim had to go hack to his hospital bed to spend the night.

Is Our God.” The marching feet brought grim reminders of the

Shrine Pilgrims

after 15 minutes of artificial res-!

27, applied artificial respiration, ment"

‘NEW YORK, June 15 (UP)—|

|miigsioners for the right to con-. uments..case.reporied today. that

18-months|

to retreat from their stand on re- term expired at midnight. The tiring the teachers, all of whom presentment was handed up to

School the Office of Strategic Reroaces (asia case, acted in a responsible

Some of the 1700 secret gov-

‘properly performed its duty” of makers,

Jerry Dunaway visited his par-

Two Groups Assail State > Jobs Program

Units Represented On Indiana's

Own. Commission By IRVING LEIBOWITZ

program, designed to eliminate job discrimination) {by voluntary methods, was ‘attacked today by two groups) which are represented on Hons own Falr il on ios | Practice Commission, Ralph K. Harrmann, corchain main of the commission, said this morning that the National Ass0-| clation for the Advancement of | { Calored People and the state’s| | Congress of Industrial Organiza-| {tions “strongly favor a compul-| isory FEPC with enforcement] | laws,” |

| yesterday . that their organiza |. [tions would ‘press for legislation designed to provide jail terme. and... "fines" {of the law,

The opposition of the CIO and | yesterday, protested that one of

| the NAACP to the present state!

|FEPC law split the state's com- | women was {ca Other participating groups on | might: includes | held In jail,

mittee. |

{the committee, which labor, management and In-| | terested organizations, | their “gcontinued opposition to St,

{job discrimination” > Adopts Resolution

ng esolution

fo lios

on: “Without relinquishing their views on the kind of a law the state should have, all members of the committe have agreed to work to gether in co-operated efforts to eliminate discrimination by voluntary action within the framework of existing state law.” The present FEPC law, passed during the 1940 session of the State Legislature, was also under fire last year by minority groups during the session of the General Assembly, A majority of the state’s lawwho voted "under the [theory that “prejudice can't be! | wiped out by law,”

present voluntary FEPC law, At platform sessions of the

{Democratic and Republican par. Where he stayed overnight during od 22 ala brief stop between outstate strong indication both parties campaigning for the Democratic “voluntary” nomination for U. 8, Senate.

ties here recently,

{by voluntary methods, | ‘The program:

|

ployers and trade {encourage and: assist them eliminating such practices, TWO:

THREE: Authorize councils at city and town level to implement!

the purpose and activities of the; 3

committee

[Centr

HAI

al Auth

Way to Meet fy 1s of 100,000 Suburbanites

on $2000 bond each in Municipal Representatives of both groups [Court 4 today, over the shouted The ‘teachers were following a|A federal grand jury which con-| told the state's FEPC committee protests of a lawyer that their

as penalties for violations representing the two . women ‘and

asserted Beth, 22, both

However, Mr. Harrmann sald Mr. Redding admitted an “ad who impaneled -the Jury on Dec, the entire committee adopted that. ; {1 He

have indicated] they will continue to back the

committee| Dell to appear here Tuesday to

| adopted a four-point program de-| Make a deposition in the libel suit {signed to end job discrimination, against Columnist Drew Pearson.

; | Arthur C. Hoffman, 5760 Lowell The delay referred to was a Would support the and women last night in Indian- | Ave. [FEPC law. apolis. ; | "All 15 held tenure rights under (Continued on Page $—Col. 7) Four-Point Plan | The sharp stamp of National {a 1927 act of the General As- To or | The state FEPC

ONE: Study discriminatory em. | Littell, Indianapolis-born former ployment practices and, on basis Assistant U, 8. Attorney General, of such study, counser~with em- Mr. Campbell's role in the dispute unions and is that the Washington columnist, in! tinder threat of federal court ac-}

Conduct a program of source of uncomplimentary story education against discrimination. {about Mr. . Littell,

E

C. of C. Calls Recomm Welfare Group Backs

endation Tentative;

More Child Aid |

Unification of all city and county -agencies administers

ing public health was being

| solution to the problem of pro The state's “fair employ- ties for persons living outside. the city limits.

studied today as a possible viding adequate health facili«

Unification was mentioned by Carl Dorteh, Indianapolis _

Chamber of Commerce, in a

Held inBond On Drug Cars

Lawyers Cry $2000 Bail Each ‘Too High'

Four persons arrested on nar|cotics charges were ordered held

bonds were ‘too high.” Attorney W,- Gordon) Davis,

{two men arrested in a police raid

“In need of medi-

and that “it life” if she were

attention” cost her

report to the Joint Citizens Committee of Indiana on “Thealth and welfare legislas tion yesterday in the Colums

bia Club. The city of Indianapolis, with 450,000 population, spends $2.5 million a year on public health, he said. Public health tures for 100,000 Marion residents who live the city limits runs-to less than $30, 000 a year, Studying Services Mr. Dortch presented the tentative finding of a technical com= mittee of the Marion County Health and isin Counen. a. committee is st Tern “providing adequate fces for the county, Unification would put the county tuberculosis hospital, county infirmary, city hospitals and county and city health of« ficers under a central ~ Annexation of suburban diss

} ii

Ruby Ward, 30, and Jennie

tricts would bring their residents

of 1120% Perry William Pardue, 37, of 815

| compulsory measures to eliminate 8. Noble 8t., and James Murphy.

139, of 1936 Broadway, were ar raigned on an affidavit charging ®

violation of the 1935 nareotics act, continued to next

_The case

Davis shouted his protests. |} Municipal Court procedure is that

tinuance. He pointed to M Miss Ward and

(Continued on n Page 2-Col. 8)

Subpena Campbell In $300,000 Suit

Senate Candidate Alex Campbell was out beating political bushes again today, but he had stopped here long enough to be subpenaed in a $300,000 libel suit.

The subpena was served on Mr. {Campbell before breakfast today at the Indianapolis Athletic club,

Faces Court Tuesday The subpena orders Mr. Camp-

Mr, Pearson is the target of & {libel action brought by Norman

{tion, named Mr. Campbell as the

3

Kiss of Death

OKAWVILLE, IIL, The 15 (UP)—More than 200 starlings here settled today on some telegraph wires, strung about 18 inches apart. The birds were soaked with rain-and their weight made the wires sag. One bird reached down to touch the beak of another and all were killed.

either side is entitled to one con- [antions, can take form.

wg]

House:

automatically under city control, he said, but suburban residents {may resist such a move.

done before “definite.

support legisla general assembly for incre ald to dependent children, 'mother with one child now re Chives $30 2 month; the colts tee asks $75 a month. each additional child a Te main at $18 a month. 5 Lhe comisiities vaud to Spotl legislation to provide tine ation County juves

nt

R

nile court judge in a nON-pregls, dential year. els Blow at Politics

Higher qualifications for school attendance officers were manded in another resolution passed by the committee. The committe endorsed a bill.

§

the aim of eliminating influence, “recommendation

Another urged that juvenile court proba tion officers be employed under the state personnel act instead of the state probation commission. This would affect only Lake and Marion Counties.

Board Gives Nod Bu To Rail Yard Men

‘WASHINGTON, June 15 (UP) -— A Presidential emergency . board today recommended a tivee

ductors and trainmen and 4000 yardmasters who work in rafle road yards. But the board granted virtually nothing to some 125,000 conduce tors and trainmen who serve the trains on the road. The board's recommendations were announced by the White

“The two. starlings that closed the circuit were frozen on the wires in their kiss of death.

{

Sesame to Soviet Embassy:

Knock on Door, Walk In

Bshind Portals and-Curtains, Columnist Tries Hoosier Friendship on a Russian

WASHINGTON, June 15-—In order to get into the Embassy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics you have to walk up to the/ | front door, knock and walk in when it s open. Can't get in other

The tora was a great surprise to the cabby who drove me)

day nine years ago that will live Altheugh he. is no longer In FOUR: Serve the office of the forever in the annals of infamy. =] loritical” condition, Jerry is. still Commissioner of Labor and coy Echoing footsteps turned the { “very tired.” hia mother said, operate with the Legislative Ad] : calendar back to June 14, 10941, ’ EL A a Fast Planes Speed {Jerry stiffered a relapse after VisOry Board in all efforts di-| when, thousands of citizens of "About femily Flow nothing” . . . Henry Agur, of Tallinh, Newspaper West treatment with the drug ACTH rected toward ending discrimi- - the Baltic states, overrun by the. pyanig;tells ie blocked flight to freedom. f ‘prodiiced a dramatic remission: in| Tato: $ 3 Russian horde, were routed out { Photos, Page 19 the deadly cancer of the blood. pews TO SPEAK. TWICE of their homes, beds ‘and - offices ‘ § enstemssesnipimetsSmm———m—o | Meanwhile, Mrs. Dunaway said =... ep En] ! and shipped off in cattle cars to, : BR areas a Bl +The... more—than 600 Murat she was-“taking hope“ from a tet: BW YORK, -June..15. (UP be i Siberia. n 1 e nsi e | Shriners and wives en route to ter from Mr. and Mrs. Glaze An- GOV. Thomas E. Dewey planned Recall Atrocities the. ‘National Shrine Pilgrirnage derson, Laurel, Miss. two speeches here today, but said The worshipers thought at Los Angeles will keep abreast Mississippi Boy Better he won't make any statement on other black days, too. Days Wins ‘Of Th Ti mes ~ of the happenings in Indianapolis. Their 11-year-old son, Billy, his political future until after he tens of thousands K of brothers e i “| For the fifth consecutive year, Was a patient with Jerry In New returns to Albany tomorrow. and sisters . . . tortured and dis- The Times, in co-operation with York's Bellevue Hospital, when figured . . . were found buried in In Indianapolis L. Strauss & Co.,. has arranged: Jerry was flown the iy The In- INSIDE WASHINGTON . sen By Ed Sovola mass graves in their homelands, {for the latest edition of The! dianapolis Times for treatment levelled to the ground. {Rabbis Myurice Goldblatt and Willlam P. Greenfeld re- { Times to follow the Shriners. The! With the new drug. 7 They thought of the long rain) ported on a recent trip to Israel before the Indian- | buginess news and sports edi-| Billy also had a dramatic reride to Siberia. Trembling old apolis Chapter of American “Christian Palestine Com- tion of the Times will be de- mission. Like Jerry, he had a repeople and somber’ men, herded! mittee last night. Emma Rivers Miiner's story is on..Page 3 |livered daily to the Shriners until lapse and was on the critical list. | like cattle, those resisting shot “If the free world will become stronger or at any rate {their return here June 286. Today's letter said the drug has| Ne on the spot. The others crammed remain as strong as Russia, both morally and mili- The first shipment of papers effected a second remission and! he - 80 to a boxcar, doors nailed shut. tarily, the realists of the Kremlin may abandon their ‘Heft ‘The Times today for Weir Billy: is home, riding his pony. : " There was pain in those! plans for aggression,” Reports Dr. Nicholas Nyaradi {Cook Muncipal Airport from|.The hormone drug, which doc-| thoughts. | in his last article on Russia's road to war.......... Page 8 where they were flown to Shriners tors stress will not cure the in-| But most of all, the thought of Henry Butler lets the smoke of a pipe dream creut®s an in El Paso. Tomorrow's edition curable leukemia, may be ad8” 3 friends and relatives hidden to-| auditorium on the Butler University campus similar will also be delivered to the pil- ministered to Jerry again. qt: ; gay behind i Curtain] to the plants of Indiana and Purdue universities on Page 16 8rims in ihe gt Star State. i fo J plagued their minds |Fred Wampler, Purdue University senior, captures the In- k. etuie of Delivery | nd Keynote speaker to the native-| dianapplls’ District golf championship Te final |" During the pilgrimage, Sunday Mercury Steams

through Thursday, The Times’ will- be speeded to Shriners on the following split] isecond sched-

costumed immigrants” and new-| found American friends was the| Rev. Isaks Volfads, Latvian Lu-

e Eddie Ash, Times Sports Editor, sums up the Indiaps’ split. doublehenderitilt of last nighton ........

Petter Edson reports on_Anderson’s highly controversial

Up; Aims at 85

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

theran Church, which sponsored ule: Sam... %0 aml : his chance in the new world. political reform group, The American Guard, in the From Weir Cook Airport ini Ta m..T 11a m.. 80 IPE first of a series of articles, Columns by Marquis Chiids, ressurized ai dit : Father Unheard From { ip ur air conditioned Amer-| 8 a mm... MN 12 (Noon) 82 { _Ludwell Denny and a “Memo to Congress” are all on fcan Airli c ir Flagshi The Iron Curtain has more than > n Alrlines Convair Flagships 9 4. m... 73 1p m.. 84 Hs share ef ‘grief for him. Three the EQROTIAI PARE ...civvetersivrnsnssnssnsy rireeeeses Page 20 at 9 p. m. to Chicago and from years ago he Worn his R0-year- old, Amusements .......... 16 Mrs. Manners sssseebes 14 there in' fast American DC-6 The ° ‘teakettle of Indianapolis” father was alive. Since then t Births, Deaths, Events =15 = MOVIES ...svevsinveses 16 | Flagships at 10 p. m., bound ‘for boiled today following the warm-| has been a dead . silence. Fis, Ship Movements ...... 29 Radio: sesesnceecscsees 18 [Los Angeles, where they will ar- est night of thé year. father, a former land-owner, was Business ..sseeveeeeive 28 RUATK «.cccsinsssssess 19 rive at breakfast time. | The weatherman said “steamConsidered an enemy of the new COMICS sesvsisssseseee 3B Ed SBov0la coevvnsvees 19 | They will .be delivered person- ing humidity” would accompany state, Crossword s.seeeesecee = 21 Society «..eceesinassss 9 ally by Horace Brown, Times cir- occasional thundershowers toTT dom’t dare write a letter] Editorials .........e.. 20 Sports ....seceseevess 24-26 [culation department. |day, tonight and tomorrow. Last! said the Rev. Mr. Volrads, .ex-| Foreign Affairs ....iss 20 Weather Map ....co00 28 | News from home will travel at night's low of 70 bested the pre-| ) ; ———— : | Gardening «.eecveveees 10 Earl Wilson aesssssses 21 lan average speed of 300 miles an vious “warmest night” of the . (Continued on Page 2 Col. 85)! Othman Sees esnnssnsnn 19 WOMEN'S sesssnsssssre 10 | hour, | year, June 9, by two degrees.

to the Russian Embassy. He said I wouldn't get past the front! door. So did several other people .., “44, charge d'affaires made

here, the door. 1 wanted to ask the ambassador: “Why can’t we be friends?” | Since Ambassador Alexander 8, Panyushkin was in Moscow, the

next logical person to see would . mee ittle man: closed the z

be the charge d'affaires, I asked the cab driver to pull iright ‘into the driveway. asked him to wait. He thought that was funny. { ~The door opened quickly after I ‘knocked. - A short man stood {slightly behind the door. My in-| itroduction-didn’t impress him. My.

I also door.

lexpiasation'of Why I wasted to (Continued on Page 18=-Col. 1).

But they didn't Knock On yu. 104 his head and close the

door, 1 was in the embassy.

A dark, stout man stood at a

deni just inside. - A small desk! lamp illuminated the neat top. I waa asked to step into a sitting

‘door and I was alone, I had entered. through a double) Curtains from the outside, covered the glass. There was oné, window. Another door was slightly Teaita gut = Before 1

‘around, nice-Jooking,|

a good look|

$7000 Buys This '5-Room Bungalow On East Side |

NICE rm. a inp. LL Stra Jon i Ll i SECURITY REALTY CO.

® If you. prefer to — on the East side, and want

bungalow . . . perhaps the above home will in= terest you. It's just one of many home advertised in gains "fied columns of today’ Times under classifica: tion 43 (HOMES FOR SALE - EAST). And for those who prefer to live NORTH, SOUTH, WEST or SUBURBAN"... there are HUNDREDS of homes to choosé from! . Yes, daily and Sunday, Times now ; you the greatest selee~

tion of homes for sale—

*

EE

nse ids oon rv H Gi a old b

day, 40-hour week for 75,000 cons

a small; low-cost modern

+

%

Be