Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 November 1950 — Page 3
§.= HR
son said his
be sufficient .
nce honest 's system of corrupt.” . »f the state re than that ry of politi "he said. aroled from ral months years of a + murder of L Statehouse olis.
Signs Paper
‘age One) se to drop a suit against ct. He also on had Qeen state after the “going ‘allan plans ved by the
Stephenson ois was ape after Stee ans for eme However, he le violation ithout notfe
nce boasted diana,” was olation and k. He had lisappearing Aug. 30. office said —no-request-extradition
during the ould waive na officials reinstating Tence said nwilling te
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+ chance to demonstrate her ability
- Jisténers,
~ MONDAY, NOV. : 20, 1950 _ Hi : . Murat DoubleHeader—
| Sevitzky he, Sonorous Surf.
Romberg Plays Again To Packed Audience
——
By HENRY BUTLER The Murat yesterday got a thorough bath in sound waves.
Sonorous surf was churned up in the afternoon by Fabien
Sevitzky and the Symphony in their second program of the’
week-end pair, and in the evening by Sigmund Romberg and his vocal and instrumental tourists.
Dr. Sevitzky's program, largely of new material, brought Mme. Guiomar Novaes back as soloist in a
“work totally different from the ‘ Beethoven Fourth Piano Concerto she had played Saturday night. Giovanni Salviucci's Italian Symphony, .a powerful, richly scored and effectively noisy essay in rhythm and counterpoint, was yesterday's first novelty. It's a sign the pledge. study in tension—in the simulta-| Dr. Sevitzky's program confeous pull of opposing melodic cluded with the “Espana” of Chalines—with more muscle than brier, which still strikes me as emotion in it. Dr. Sevitzky and Just about the best thing in its
siliane,” following intermission, were, I thought. pretty feeble impressions from the composer of “The Fountains of Rome” and “The: Pines” of ditto. One extremely effective bit of description was the serpent music in “Butantan,” second item in the impressions—enough to make even mild tipplers rush out to
the orchestra gave it one-of the class. For a piece played so often, ‘best performances of the after- it has great vitality.
One reason for that is the tremendous and sustained expectancy generated
noon. Deems Taylor's Restoration i Suite, repeated from - Saturday oy the constant Iteration of the icy . = > aT minant C in the key of F. night, greatly pleased yesterday's Something's bound to happen, you audience. Mr. Taylor himself was say to yourself in the Tr of on hand to acknowledge enthusi- a1] the ‘ingratiating themes and atsic applause. tantalizing rhythm. But all of .a The Villa-Lobos “Momo Pre- sudden comes the coda, and that’s coce,” In which Mme. Novaes, as that. It makes you wonder what soloist, wisely played from notes, kind of weed Chabrier smoked. created some puzzlement among :
" a ” judging from intermis- StGMEND-ROMBER6 packed: sion comments. It's a musical the Murat, as per custom, last’
translation of the behavior of Bight. h ‘ Sg} children in a. Brazilian carnival ib in, e was assisted by Mary Becker, violinist; Lois Hunt,
With only a few expressive pas- prano; Victoria St S0sages for piano, it gave Mme. ahd Lillian i Enemy, “Soprano, Novaes little scope beyond a | Sana Y, soprano, for-
merly of Indianapolis and daughter of William Shectman of the Symphony's cello section. Miss Shelby, who evidently had many friends in the audience, sang clearly and pleasingly.
to “stay with the orchestra in some fiendishly difficult rhythms. It may be sawing off a limb on the tree side of the sitter to say the piece is over-elaborate to the point of diminishing returns. But I don’t see the wisdom of scoring that reaches and yesterday sometimes seemed to pass an orchestra's tolerance. As an experiment in tone color, “Momo Precoce” is interesting. As a terribly complextest of an orchestra's rhythmic sanity, I can’t help thinking it's a mean trick on the composer's part. Too much complexity, too much subtlety, gradually cancels out.
To Such Education in WASHINGTON, Nov.
Many agreed that the facts
~The Respighi “Impressioni Bra-|
In his usual sort of pro-/
Protestant Clerg Stand of Catholivs on Sex
Leaders Dispute Bishops’ Opposition
“Nouths Call 'Dynamite ‘Big Firecrackers’
Face Appearances in’
Court Today in
Blasting of House Four youths who said thought dynamite was sized firecrackers”
ponder their lack of knowledge as
they waited today. Three boys, 15, 16 and 17 years
old, were scheduled into Juvenile Court, and a 21-year-old compan-
fon. faced charges Court for their ‘experimental’ dynamiting of an abandoned house at 200 8S. Kitley Ave. Saturday night, They set old house, owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad. Seven sticks were detonated; and another bundle of 19 sticks failed to explode
in Municipal
string fuse. i Caught on Return The quartet had driven a quarter of a mile away before they heard the blast. When they failed ito hear a second, they drove back to see what was the matter, They were picked up by sheriff's
deputies who had arrived to in- today to decide in what five Texans died when their twoengined private
vestigate. The three youths and William Goodall, 21, of 936 E. 58th St. admitted setting the blast "just for an experiment.” Goodall is
charged with unlawful _possession Houston,
of explosives.” Two of the youths admitted they stole the dynamite Oct. 22 from the home of O. N. Haines, near Beech Grove. Mr. Haines, who formerly was a distributor for dynamite, did not report the theft, sheriff's deputies said. In addition to
covered about 150 pounds hidden around the boys’ homes.
Hits
the Schools
two charges in the
‘and burned on a Catskill moun-{ The victims were Mrs. Gill, her day. cluded: President Elpidio Quirno turned tain peak in a July rainstorm./two children, Dee Ann, 15, and The Zim, a six-cylinder vehicle, National security training com- down today the resignation of Disposition of the $170,000 for-/John, 19, oilman J. R. Horrigan, is not as ornate as the luxury car mittee Roscoe Mount, Bedford; Finance Secretary Pio Pedrosa on’ tune of Mrs. Anne Gill, 44, of(and his pilot, Justin “Frank “Zis” but more ornate than the Ernest Gilmore, Bloomington, and grounds he was “one of the best Tex. who. was. killed, Aldrich _all of Houston. four-cylinder “Pobeda.” Lluis Lemstra, Clinton. finance secretaries we ever had." STRAUSS SAYS: IRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF OMORROW!
| the explosives] found at the scene, deputies re-!
they “just overhad time to
court appearances
American soldier stands on knocked-out Russian-made T-34 tank which he put out of commission, because of a faulty homemade north of Pyongyang, with the bazooka cradled in his right arm. The soldier is with the U. S. 24th : Division, which is working with British units in drive up’ Korea's northwest coastetowards the Man-
churian border.
Seek to. Establish
Order of Plane Deaths
| | | | |
20 (UP)—Protestant clergymen and edu-| cators today disputed a stand by American Catholic bishops that |
sex education should be kept out of the ‘schools. |
of life could best he taught in|
.
i Svench Id sav. it isn't the home, but the majority felt that parents had fallen down on! As te ren: n Nau nh - their job and it now is up to schools to fill the gap. wol ne pain. A piece like S ies ots to ressmble one of Stein- The issue was touched off by a parents are responsible to see -that| gets ap - : .4500-word policy statement issued sox equcation is “properly carried], berg's comic New Yorker draw- by the Catholic. Bishops of the on in the home” ings—full of detail to the point of (rpjted States at -the end of their : hysteria. annual meeting here. It said | Rev. Sidney W. Powell, pastor me of the Tremont Temple Baptist|
Hi-Yuh, Perle
. OSLO, Nerway, Nav. 20 (UP)-—The Liber#l hewspaper Verdens Gang expressed alarm today at reports that Perle Mesta may become U. 8. ambassador to Norway. It said she should stick to party- - giving. Mrs. Mesta, a noted Washington hostess, is now U. S. Minister to Luxemboury.
Chided on_ 1 Pregnancy,
Woman Kills Father PORTLAND, Me., Nov. 20 (UP) ~Authorities quoted a 34- -yearold divorcee today that she shot "her 76-year-old father to death because he ‘‘chided her about her pregnancy.” : " . Mrs. Rena J. Brown killed her father, Ralph Jewett with a rifle - Saturday -might- “nthe kitchen or
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his home where she lived with her . 18-year-old son, Assistant County Attorney Arthur <Chapman. Jr, said. The bullet also struck her “boy friend,” John E. - Who wouldn't, with that smart | Morgan, 45 a New Gloucéster
The woman, divorced since *
when the car’
Church, Boston,
feelings of many
summed up the! Protestant |
|clergymen who opposed any ban!
on sex education.
“1 agree with | bishops that,
fhe
{sponsibility of parents,” he said.
“But, practically, since so many parents refuse to assume this re- , sponsibility, it
is necessary
some other agency to assume it.” M. E. Coleman, assistant super-, intendent of schools, Atlanta, Ga. agreed that sex education is pri-
ents. to indicate ‘that it's clusive repsonsibility.” “The public school system was |
{
Catholic ideally, it is the re-|
for|
~ ‘marily the responsibility of parBut he said there is nothing their ex-|
organized to prepare students for|
life,” he said, “and it certainly cannot omit sex.” Some of the Protestants, felt
that parents simply were not
qualified to teach their offsprings|
the complicated sex processes. “THe Reév., Morris" Co Minneapolis ter and member School = Board, explained many parents feel inadequate doing the job themselves and wel-
come the assistance of both the ”
of
church and the public schools S. E. Penniman, director of the educational center of the Episcopal Diocese of Missouri, said no religious group has the right to speak authoritatively on sex ede cation” in public schools. “The American principle is that the public schools belong to alll people,” he said. “What is taught in’ them, including sex education, depends on the desires of the individuals in each school district.”
ort DELICIOUS | nore Fry MACARONI |
Robinson, Presbyterian minis-! the - Public] that’
PHOENICIA, N. Y.; Nov. (UP)—A coroner asked the cou
plane
Gl Rests After KO of | pe Russ-Made Tank
order
crashed
“American L n Plans | To Get doy on Reds
Commander Cocke Appoints 139 16
Committee on Un-American Activities
The American Legion is “serfous about getting tough with Co munists,” National Commander Erle Cocke declared yesterday | appointing 139 “Legionnaires to a Committee on Un-Am Activities. 3, “We are going to work in a legal manner but with pitiless pub= licity in carrying the fight to the Communists in this country and
to such renegade Americans who 2 put profit .above patriotism and National rehabilitation commise who traffic with our enemies,” Sion: William A. Sivits, Ft. Wayne; Cmdr. Cocke said. : George Fisher, Liberty; George Walter. N. Alessandroni, Phila- Snider, Brownstown; Holly
iy delphia, Pa. will head the new Jasonville; Paul V. Shrader, New. . group, and J. E. Martie, Reno, Albany, and Dr. Norman Ry » Nev., will be vice chairman, Hoo- Booher, Indianapolis.’
Mrs. Willis C. Reed, president of the American teglon Auxiliary} ‘and Harold V. Haines, Cedar .
sier members of the committee include Louis Nattkemper, Terre Haute, Steve Rhatican, Indianap-
olis, Gilbert Bates, Milford, Clar- Lake, were named advisory mems - ence Hipsher, Logansport, and bers of the national Child Wel- , Leo W. Petry, Hammond. fare committee,
Eighteen Hoosier Legionnaires
In other action, Cmdr. Cocke! : were named to the distinguished,
named Col. Roscie Turner, Indianapolis, chairman of the Aero- guest committee. nautics Committee. J. Earl Mc-. Rounding out additional ape. v 3 : a Curdy, La Porte, was re-appoint- pointments: Isidore E. Levine, Lae sits ad dN 2 J ; {oie : ad chairman of the Contests Su- Porte, labor relations committee; NEA Telephoto) pervisory Committee. William F. Harvey B. Stout, Indianapolis, and O'Neill, Indianapolis, becomes a Louis Goble, Jasonville, veterans’ member of the National Rehabil- preference committee; W. I. Bruns itation Commission. Spencer Huf- ton, Scottsburg, and Jack Dun< fman, Kokomo. was appointed to ten, LaGrange, membership and
- tee en the National Child Welfare Com- post activities committee; Dr, with her two children and oilman-
Russ Mass Produce na mission. John M. Palm, Brazil, rehabilitae contractor employer, rested ‘on . : Past National Commander tion medical advisory board; Robthe decision. Medium-Priced Car (George Craig, Brazil, will serve'ert Gaskill, Ft. Wayne, law and 20, A search party brought the MOSCOW, Nov. 20 (UP)--The with the current national officers order committee; Victor Liddil, ris charred bones of the five missing medium-priced Soviet “Zim” auto- of the Legion as an officer of the Evansville, marksmanship: victims down . yesterday from ; Overseas Graves Decoration Trust ron er—————er— Slide Mountain, highest peak in mobile has been put into mass oo - ‘WON'T LET AID RESIGN [the Catskills. production. it was announced to- Other Indiana : appointments in-. MANILA, P. 1, Nov. 20 (UP)—
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