Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1950 — Page 14

At La Prensa Te

By ERNIE HILL LAKE SUCCESS, N.

less battle for existence. The attacks against

past..

is flooded. Took Over Warehouse

distributed to Peron papers,

paper than his competitors, and news he must throw away.

to his own statements, want to kill Argentina's other newspaper, La Nacion.

that own and operate them.

those who criticize his controlled press that La Prensa and La Nacion prove that he believes in freedom of press.

Wants to Break Them

At the same time, he wants to break the Paz family, which owns one paper, and the-Mitres who own the other, "Even before he was elected president, Peron once told the late, ‘Pedro Cue, Havana publisher, that it was his great ambition to ruin the Paz family known inter-| nationally for its fine newspaper. | Shocked, Cue repeated the!

the United States, to deny it. : Gen. Peron, ‘after his election, toyed with the idea of filing a law suit against La Prensa to collect "mililons of dollars from it. He stated that it had illegally received an import tax discount! on its newsprint purchase claiming the paper was for education and cultural purposes... seemed too raw, Peron | could institute the suit, get a judgment from one of his hand-| «picked judges and bankrupt 14] Prensa in a month.

Many Received Benefits ~

Too many millions of Argen-| tines consider everything they ‘read in the paper as gospel truth.

Peron sought

ceived free medical care and

scholarships for. their children from La Prensa. Peron has never felt strong |

enough to wreck the paper. He | only wants to bleed it to death. But every attack, such as the current one, increases its circus lation.

dors—Stanton Griffits, James - Bruce and George Messersmith— have praised Peron for his reforms. But none of them has been able to say much about ‘his aftacks against a free and inde pendent press. They have turned their heads every time he has launched new campaigns against La Prensa and La Nacion. Copyright, 1950. for The Indianapolis Times

Figuring Money In New Z ealand Just Too Involved

"WELLINGTON, N. Z., Nov. 23 (CDN) It takes ‘farthings to-make a half-penny, two. half12 pen

two

pennies to make a penny nies to .make a shilling shillings to make a pound. Got that? Then try adding © 10/6-M, 2/11M, 16/8-! and one pound, 14 shillings, and six-pence. The answer-—after a bit of figur-ing-—~works out at thre? pounds, four shillings, and eight pence ‘(about $9). : The elimination of all this figuring is now the hope of Rep. Rex Mason, who has just introduced a bill in New Zealand's paliament to switch the country’s coinage

and 20

tem Americans use.

Church Members Start

‘Visit Neighbors Day’

CHICAGO (UP)—Seventh Day Adventist church members have started a “visit your neighbor” day to help increase church attendance. A church spokesman said three days have been set aside by the denomination as part of a plan for congregations to visit 10 milHon homes this year.

“Mind Your Business’

In First U. S. Coin The wards + Jing ‘Your - Busi-

her Blow

He only wants to destroy their effectiveness and ruin the families

Peron is quick to point out to

"threat to me in an airplane be-| tween Buenos Aires and Santiago, Chile. When it was published in|

Y., Nov. 23 (CDN)—President Juan Do-| mingo Peron is punishing Argen-| tina’s’ leading - newspaper again | by allowing it only enough newsprint to last a few days at a time. | Some new penalties against La Prensa of Buenos Aires were ex-| pected since Dr. Alberto Gainza | Paz, its publisher, came to the United States in October and re-| ceived another award for his fear-|

| Latin | America’s greatest newspaper] have followed that pattern in the

Dr. Gainza Paz has dollars to buy all of the newsprint he wants, but the Peron government will let him use only as much as the puniest of thé pro Peron newspapers with. which Buenos Aires

Early last year, Peronista police took physical charge of the La Presna warehouse and impounded all of the paper on hand. It later was hauled away in—trucks—and:

A later refinement prohibits Dr. Gainza Pas from using any more regardless of how much advertising |

Generalissimo Peron, according does not L.a Prensa and independent

|

Too many thousands have. re.)

America’s last -three ambassa-||

over to the simpler decimal sys-

Dalai Lama vs. Panchen Lama—

Buddhists Elevate 16-Year-Old to Full

Power to Rally Followers Against Reds ~ By HAROLD GUARD, United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, Nov. 23 (UP)—One of the most unusual wars in history is developing in Tibet today.

against one another as the leaders of men.

| i |

On one side is the boy Dalaj,

HE IDTANAPOLIS TIMES

Tibet War Pits 2 Teen-Age Boys As Leaders of Men

{ On the other is the Panchen the war in Heaven described in Lama. 13, who fs being used by Poet John Milton's “Paradise, The Dalal Lama, born at the Ual Tesistance, inspired by the

=

logy would allow the Panchen|cherous mountain passes and aifLama to supplant the Dalal Lama /¢joyuit supply problems, the

{in authority over the whole coun-

try.

Spiritual Resistance

Chinese invaders now will bé con-

the Chinese Communists as a Lost,” in which “angel on arch- moment the last ruler died, was Dalal Lama, who commands al-

means to assert their authority angel rolled.”

over Tibet.

Both Lamas are regarded by B

Lama, 16, who | is assuming his jigion which rules Tibet i ~ {full powers to rally his Buddhist followers against the Communist of a political party.

|Chinese invaders. The battle is being

not to be elevated to full spiritual legiafice from all ‘Tibetans.

Sir Basil Gould, for 20 years and ternporal powers until he! ritish political representative at reached the age of 19. But in view menting on the Dalai Lama's ele-

The Manchester Guardian, com-

It is a war in which two teen-aged boys are being pitted their followers as a reincarnation hasa, capital of Tibet, and one of ‘the Communist Chinese inva- vation, said: .of Buddha, founder of the re- of the foremost authorities on the! sion, he is being placed in author-, n place Himalayan Mountain country,|ity now. This is s expected to bol-| said none bit a few Tibetans in-|ster the Tibetais’ resistance.

“In a country suffering invasion |a romantic young leader is a bet-

In addition to blizzards, trea- ter asset than an aging regent.”

fronted with an intangible spirit-|

. THURSDAY, “Nov. 23, 1950,

Five Geese Weed Strawberry Patch

HAZARD, Ky. (UP) — Five geese were used by the Buckhorn school farm to weed®an acre of strawberries. : Howard Burdine, farm manager \and vocational agricultural teacher, said his formula for weeding with geese is simple. “Just fence the geese in,” he said. “If they fly out, crop one wing.”

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