Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1950 — Page 5

$1.30 $2.75 1 60

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$4.25

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302 Belmar Ave. and Carol Mitchel, Rochester.

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= second week of the strike.

vised over the American Broad

day night. Students facing the camera ‘are, left to right; William

Horner, Evansville; Barbara Droll

Pittsburgh Business Hurt By Newspaper Shutdown

Three Dailies Cease Publication After

Four Indiana University students smile for the birdie on the Bloomington campus, where the |U-Notre Dame game was filmed by TV cameras yesterday as the "All-American Game of the Week." Movies of the game and of campus scenes will be tele-

casting Co. video network Tues-

inger, South Bend; Dale Monroe, |

Walkout by Mailers’ Union Oct. 1

By Seripps-Howard Newspa;

PITTSBURGH, Oct. 21 — Th

pers e back fence is making a great }

come-back in this newsless city of 700,000. . | That's because the three daily newspapers have ceased publi-| cation due to a strike. That strike has left citizens of the nation’s! steel center in the dark as to what's going en. | A few smidgins of news get around by way of that old standby | |

for gossips—the back fence—and over the radio. Generally, though, just about everyone here is starved for news since the mailer’s union refused to come to work at the Press, SunTelegraph and Post-Gazette. That was Oct. 1 when the publishers refused to grant a $1-a-day pay raise and give the mailers an unwritten contract. The strikers want a verbal agreement.

Battle for Papers

Pittsburgh's seven radio stations are trying to satisfy the hunger for news. Most have expanded their reporting staffs and increased the number of broadcasts. Some have added newsmen from the shut-down papers, “But news over the radio just isn’t like reading it ‘in print,” more than one person has complained. “You get the gist of it but not all the facts and background. Comes in one ear and out the other.” ' Publishers of dailies from other | cities have refused to send more! than their usual number of papers to Pittsburgh. The battle for some 3000 out-of-town papers trickling into -the area daily resembles the meat and butter lines of World War II ’ Store Sales Drop - Queues form in front of stands as early as 6 a. m. The bundles are gobbled up as fast as they are unwrapped. One man walked into a downtown restaurant with a Sunday New York paper and was mobbed | by persons begging: ‘Please, just let me see the headlines.” He was offered $2 for the paper, but refused. '

‘tries, tries to maintain the illu-|

i

Once-Gay Vienna East-West Pawn |

Austria Plays Rivals | Against Each Other |

By PAUL MOCSANYI United Press Staff Correspondent | VIENNA, Oct. 21— Once life] here was easy and gay. Vienna! was the capital of a powerful empire, the ‘queen of the blue Danube and the city of Schubert and Strauss, Ss 0 Today it is an outpost of the iwestern ‘world sitjiated a few les from the Iron Curtain. | “With some of the most beauti-| ful landmarks of the inner city destroyed in the war, this once famous and elegant quarter looks! like an old theater that hasn't! been in use for many years. i

Maintain Illusion

The Viennese found out long! ago that the mirage of the good old days exerts a magic attraction on travelers from the west, One likes to be transported for a few days from the harsh present into the happy-go-lucky atmosphere of the past. That is why Austrian tourism, one of the country’s main indus-

sion that the good old days are! here again. i Vienna was once the meeting, place of the east and west. Today, |

with the breakdown of communi-|

Many housewives depended on the Thursday and Friday papers for grocery bargains. Now they have to shop around. = | Downtown business has been) hard hit, too. The Federal Reserve Board reported department stors sales dropped 6.3 per cent, compared with the corresponding week in 1948. And it was expected to drop even more during the

Advertise on Radio In an effort to stimulate the seasonal pre-Christmas and fall

"buying rush, stores are grabbing

PREBBLE NT RY

BEF EICLLEF ARTETA FRALEY REED LENE

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all available radio time, distributing wave after wave of handbill| supplements, One even took to

“the billboards to proclaim -“Ad-|

vertised or not—(we) have it.” |

Florists are crying in their pe-

_ tunia beds. With obituaries and

death notices no longer in circu-| lation, one estimated business was

{the capital of the clandestine em-

| are helped in this task by the fact |that they can move easily and in-

cations between the two worlds, it has become one of the world's big-! gest secret information centers,’

vire of international espionage. | Viennese Help Both

Many of the easy going Vien-, nese are helping one or the other! side or. both. They have great ability for intelligence work ‘and

conspicuously in all four occupation zones of Austria. 5 Since the outbreak of the Korean War a new industry has sprung up in Vienna: The mant-| facture of false papers, | Many wealthy Austrians or those who have rendered service to the west are buying false American papers in order to move westward should the situation be-|

come unbearable. The Americans |

off 20 per cent or more. Sporting are somewhat jittery, too, for

goods, home appliance and other! stores have similar tales of woe/ ~— “the strike hurts us plenty.” | With one of Pennsylvania's hot- |

test elections in years coming up, |

politicians are stymied by the | blackout of news. { Pittsburgh is like a haunted house. There's plenty going on, put nobody knows what.

Plenty of F

Limit

S

Call

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they know that should anything! happen they will be the first ones, to be caught. Watched, wooed and threatened) by both rivals, the Austrian-gov-ernment has adopted a foreign

[policy that is as simple as it is

efficient: It uses the west against the east and the east against the’ west. : |

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