Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1951 — Page 11
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FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 195 World Report—
Is Highly D
The mystery of the disappearance of two high-ranking British diplomats deepened today when it was discovered their families had received messages from them which were
not in their handwriting.
Contents of three telegrams from Donald D. MacLean,
38, and Guy Burgess, 40, lon missing from their London posts for 14 days, were kept secret by the British foreign office. A spokesman said Mr. MacLean’s mother and wife each had received a message. third ‘wire went to Mr. Burgess’ mother. Original drafts of the wires, sent from Paris, were in unfamiliar handwriting, officials said. Same Handwriting
Missing D Six Nations Searching For British Pair: U.'S.
The|
1
isturbed
g-time friends who have been | | Department addressed the Eng'ish Speaking Union.
ran | IRAN refused today to issue
three-month visa permits to for-| eign correspondents covering the Anglo-Iranian oil nationalization dispute. A spokesman for the aliens department said the gov{ernment had reserved the right to
They said the originals of all expel foreign newsmen if it saw three messages appeared to be in fit.
the same handwriting. {
In Paris the French national security police released a phrase from Mr. MacClean's message to his wife saying:
“Obliged to go away for a time.
Don’t worry. Much love.” In Washington, U. 8. officials said today the Central
over the disappearance of the
Intelli-| gence Agency and the State De-! partment are highly disturbed
Meanwhile, an advance guard of 51 members of Britain's 16th Parachute Brigade arrived on the island of Cyprus by plane today from Malta. The group began preparations for the arrival of 3000 other members of | the brigade en route by ship from England. The Brigade was ordered here to stand by for possible trouble in connection with
: | Iran’s nationalization of the Brittwo officials. They said there is not th «| ish-controlled Anglo-Iranian Oil
slightest doubt that both agencies Co.
will make strong representations
that the foreign office should Austria
clean house, regardless of whom! may be hurt. : They said that in view of their records the two men should not have continued to occupy posts in the British foreign office. Mr. MacLean, head of the British foreign office American department, and Mr. Burgess, a specialist on Far Eastern affairs, disappeared from . their homes here May 25. They were known to have arrived in Paris three days later, but their bag-
Mr, MacLean
Mr. Burgess gage was found on an English
Channel steamer and never was claimed.
MEMBERS of Russia's repatriation mission in Salzburg hastily stuffed their belongings in burlap bags today and prepared to leave the U. 8. zone of Austria without a fuss in compliance with
an American ultimatum. .
Yugoslavia
prevent “another Korea” in Yugo-
Czechoslovakia COMMUNIST Czechoslovakia was reported to be razing all buildings on its 200-mile Iron Curtain frontier to prepare for a feared invasion from the West, a dispatch from Frankfurt, Germany, said today. ®
Formosa MAJ. GEN. WILLIAM C. CHASE, chief of the U. 8, military mission to Formosa, said at Taipeh today more U. S. Army,
MARSHAL TITO’S government ance as a witis seeking U. 8. military aid to'ness say thé in-}
slavia, Foreign Minister Edvard Kardelj said in Belgrade today. | .
the Chorwon Reservoir but fai | advance.
| BATTLE OF THE TRIANGLE—Allied forces (black arrows) | punched out gains along the roads to Chorwon and Kumwha, bases | of the Communist Iron Triangle. The Reds, fighting delaying action apparently to cover a withdrawal from the triangle, opened
»
led to stop the United Nations
Resignation Best for U. 5.7— .
Acheson’s Standing
| 1
Improves B
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
-
Diplomats’ Notes Not In Own
Tiny Wind Tunnel Tests Plane Speed 0f 13.000 MPH
By PETER EDSON Times Stat Writer
HAMPTON, Va., June 8—Flight speeds of up to 13,000 miles an hour are being prepared for in res search conducted at the Langley Aeronautical Laboratory near here. : This is stuff that makes Alley Oop and his time machine look like slow motion. It is even more revolutionary than the battle between the Merrimac and the Mon-
+
The next step toward solution of a long-hrewing dispute about how state aid to schools should be distributed was up to the Indiana Supreme Court today. The many-sided feud took a new turn late when County Judge John L. Niblack accused Wilbur Young, state superintendent of public instruection, of usurping the power of the Indiana Attorney General and trying to reduce that office to “a rubber stamp.” Judge Niblack, of Marion County Superior Court, answered an alternative writ of mandate issued by the Supreme Court last week and sald he “properly denied” change of venue requested by Mr. Young.
rR rr
Han
state's. commission on general education, was named in a suit asking a declaratory filed by Gary school 4 They asked Judge Niblack to determine whether state funds distributed to schools in August should be by a 1949 or 1951 law.
Welder Burned in Blast Of Auto Gas Tank:
Fire and gasoline just: don’t mix. The lesson was impressed yesterday on Orin Stigall, 38, RR, 3, who was using a welding torch to cut a fender from a 16-gallon gas tank. ‘
Police called to Jones Auto Co, |P
High Court to Get School Aid V
itor, which was fought at nearby
The state’s highest court now
445 W, Wi St, found| stake
Hampton Roads. must uphold Judge Niblack's 13,000 miles an hour really mean,/And once the ot has hot der you have to stop and make a few cided, officials felt certain cision would be appealed to the 17 times the speed ofcouUrt for final judgment. . sound. The technical name for it| A In Hl reply io the gh Jr, is speed with a “Mach number” udge , in part, :
of 17. Mach One is roughly “760 Named in Suit miles an hour at sea level. | “It requires no crystal ball to
Cites Speed of Earth foresee, should state officers each The revolving earth, at the p, nermitted to litigate state busi-
ut Little
By CHARLES LUCEY
Seripps-Howa
rd Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, June 8—Secretary of State Dean Ache-
json probably has bettered somewhat his standing in Con-|
gress in a week's testimony on Far East policy, but by no
means has reversed the overwhelming tide running against
him.
That's the composite view of a representative group of
Senators who have heard him day after dey in hearings
| i growing out of Gen. Douglas {MacArthur's dismissal. | Even those rating him with a creditable, at times perhaps su|perior, perform- Ll
escapable and compelling political fact is that}
does not the confidence of} the country. It is questionable whether Mr, Acheson has changed his po-
Mr. Lucey sition at all among his severest critics, mostly Republicans, who
{insist he distorts the true picture friendly to the administration The old superstitious fear of this
of our course in the Far East. Gets Limited Favor
~|foreign policy officer. | A top Democrat put it this way:
_ |sell anything. main unruffied under insults. He
{hours. {1000 miles an hour. But celestial
equator, travels 25,000 miles in 24 ness as they see fit, t by virtue This is only a little over of differences in nt, policy and political or ‘personal prejudice, constant political bickering and suits would ensue and the of-
| satellit ets, meteors and | {the like—travel 26,000 miles an
{hour and up. So Mach 17 flight lis still only half-speed when com-| f1°¢ Of Attorney General would
{be reduced to a rubber stamp. {pared to that. | None of the aeronautical en- Such a situation a unthinkgineers and scientists at this huge *P of avery pre. $60 million National Advisory|SePt of our form of governmen
Committee for Aeronautics re. and constitutional safeguards of search center will crawl out on|the wishes and desires of the
Mr. Stigall with first and second
To appreciate what speeds ot|Stand or order 2 change of anus. ogee burns on his face and Mr. Stigall was treated and re-|"
leased at General Hospital.
ie me Of $116 in Cash
The office safe at Daisy Theater was “cracked” last night by thieves who escaped with $116 and additional cash from the candy counter. William Roebaugh, manager of the theater, said the thieves had apparently remained in the build-
shown.
ing after the featured films were
WOMEN KNOW! That's why wise homemakers of Indianapolis use The Times Classified ads to solve everyday problems. Watch
the end of a wing to make any|People.” predictions as to when mankind| Mr. Young, as a member of the
a degree of unity among leaders and people. But with most Republicans in {Congress unalterably opposed to Mr. Acheson, it seems agreed that unity is impossible as long as he remains the nation’s No. 1
“Mr. Acheson hasn't tried to charm them, he hasn't tried to He managed to re-
showed capacity to master an
‘lamazingly wide range of facts on {Far East policy, he proved his] “patriotism and he showed, his
calmness under fire. Thinks He Should Quit
“Yet I think he best could serve {his country by resigning.” Another Democratic Senator
said he believed Acheson had done a good job for the administration in justifying its
But he probably has helped par East policy. but that, in per-
180i
will be traveling at anything like! Mach 17 speeds. The fastest human flight figure ; officially announced is “several hundred miles an hour faster than 10 Mach One.” This is roughly 1000 miles an hour. This’ is just over what is known as the “trans- " range. 2 Mass Produced Unofficially, however, it has been reported that the Navy's new F7U-3 Cutlass, now being massprodiiced in Texas, has flown at speeds of from 900 to 1200 miles and hour under test conditions. | Research is still going on in speeds approximately the speed of sound. The principles of aero- ’ nautics—the characteristics of the atmosphere, temperatures and the resulting strains on metals and {structures—change sharply as speed crosses the sonic barrier.
(Sonic barrier is now gone. But it] : is still a formidable obstacle to #0 science, ; pes
—————— ni
Navy and Air Force personnel have come here to help train Na-
Foul Play Discounted
himself at least to a limited ex- sonal terms, he doubted Mr. Raiders Score
tent with some Democratic Sen-|Acheson had done himself much
police vice squad last night
Officials refused to advance any theory and discounted ques-| tions that the pair might have met foul play. Colleagues also doubted any political implications in the disappearance. | The foreign office started a six-| nation search for the pair. *
Britain
t { { i
tionalist China’s armed forces.
Singapore
{were almost as cold ‘to him as were Republicans. Some of them | atRUSSIA has ordered 6000 tons have told President Truman £1 ly that Mr. Acheson should resign. of rubber from Singapore firms But now some Democrats say he after failing to get it in Britain, did well in arguing his position reliable sources said today. and point that—up to today, any- : |way—Republicans have not torn Germany 'him to shreds as they had hoped.
good. ators. Before he testified, they = wy, may have improved his po-
|sition with some individual Sen-
ators, but he hasn’t changed it at all with the people of this country. As our foreign policy head hé is in a place calling for deep political understandings, but’ he just doesn’t have any idea what is in the mind of the people. He is miscast. His word just is not
and early today confiscated baseball pool an® Pick-N-Win tickets at four establishments on their] | suspected list. Officers said tickets : : were found at Lincoln Tavern, * Gg 1539 8. East St.; Vi ia Avenue 4 ay Cigar Store, 343 Virginia Ave.; : Volrath’s Tavern, 118 E. Palmer St, and th’s Buffet Tavern, 1443 Shelby St. .
SLEEPY-EYED members of RUSSIA has established an! Parliament today concluded alatomie spy network in West Ger-| marathon session that lasted many, the West Berlin newspaper through the night and set a post-| Tagesspiegel said today. The war record for a continuous sit- newspaper said German agents ting. {posing as scientists gathering The government's finance bill technical information are forwas debated in the session that warding atomic information to started at 8:30 a. m. (Indianapo-|the Soviet Union through Berlin. lis Time) yesterday and finished| In Goel, Germany, Wolfgang exactly 22 hours and 3 min- Hedler, super-nationalist “German utes later, [ Reich Party” member of the West
Some Democrats who have pelieved by foo many people.” shifted their position in his favor, It is a fact that mistrust of the though, still are unwilling to say State Department con so publicly. The reason is that/ among a large group in 3S. they know the people back home So Mr. Acheson and his departin their states do not believe Mr. ment will continue to have trouAcheson should be Secretary of|ble on Capitol Hill. State. Many of these Senators
continue to think he should re- UJ. S. Charges Outboard sign. BR Hiss SHI an Issue Fosters a Monopoly
The Conservatives, headed by German parliament, went on trial Winston Churchill, waged a re-|today on charges of anti-Semitism lentless fight against the bill, and slandering anti-Nazis. Hedler which will give a legal basis to was arrested at the Bonn railway the new budget. {station last night after ending a The government, meanwhile, 24-hour sitdown strike in the West
Thus men of his own party,| WASHINGTON, June 8 (UP)—|
considered using troops today to end a five-day-old wildcat dsck strike as food supplies neared the
- vanishing point In some London
shops. More than 7000 tons of] meat and 3000 tons of hutter were strike-bound aboard ships at Lon-! don docks. ae Also in London, John Foster Dulles said last night there willl be no World War III if the Westtern powers stick together. The
German parliament.
{whose political business it is to
know what the country is thinkjing, contend that nothing Mr. | Acheson could do in the present inquiry could wipe out the {memory of his public refusal to
* {“turn my back” on “Alger Hiss. : | One Democratic Senate leader Indo-China said also that President Truman THE FRENCH commander in phaq4 full right to fire Gen. Mac-Indo-China, Gen. Jean de Lattre porthur, but the dismissal was de Tassingy, returned to his post \pungled. In- the country’s mind, by airplane today after burying ne added, Mr. Acheson, as the hts soldier-son in France. His 23- man who had quite generally op-year-old son, Lt. Bernard de Lat-| posed Gen. MacArthur's policies tre de Tassigny, was killed in|gand who'was “close to the throne” action against the Indo-Chinese | in Washington, bears a large
The Federal Trade Commission today charged the nation’s largest outboard motor manufacturer! with monopolistic practices, |
{ It issued a complaint against! | the Outboard, Marine & Manufac|turing Co. which makes Johnson | Seahorse, Evinrude and Elto out{board motors as well as motors] | for special order. Selling more than any other { manufacturer, t he commission {said, it had gross sales amounting to $16 million in 1949. The com-
jpany was charged with selling to distributors and dealers on con-
for bargains or sell your unused articles. PHONE RIl-ley 5551.
special adviser to the U, 8. State ~ mmunists
IN AREZZO, police today quelled a near-riot by 300 natives (r's DREAMY and in creaking, 13th century armor. It all started over a jousting tournament-—-part of medieval |games held every year since the {1300's in this city of northern {Italy. Four separate armored teams attacked a dummy “knight” in the center of the square after a rusty. old cannon signaled them to begin. The judges awarded the victory to the Porto “San Spirito team. Supporters of the three others protested and yelled “fraud.” Members of the three losing
3 ” CREAMY, of ou THE BEAMY
Plenty of Free Parkin
SPECIAL PURCHASE
part of the responsibility for that
| . |bungling. [Ital | Even Senators who now are | aly somewhat friendlier to Mr. Ache-
{son than before he began his story say that the compelling need in a time of national difficulty and crisis is to try to get
outfits, along with their knights-in-waiting and lance holders, moved in on the judges. The armor clanked and creaked. The warriors waved their 15-foot spears menacingly. The judges became panicky and called police, who sped to the area in jeeps. Soon all was calm, and the old cannon again fired the shot that signaled the end of the annual tournament. There were no casualties, ex- | apt for a few dents here and there.
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{dition they would not deal in com{'peting products.
‘Blow Off Fingers
| BARBERTON, O., June 8 (UP)|
{—Two new soldiers, tired of Army [life and discipline, were being held by authorities here after both blew two fingers off their right {hands to dodge further military With
four months
{behind ' them, Harold White, 19, {and Ray Miller, 21, Spencer, W. {Va., blasted their hands with a 12guage shotgun in a wooded section three miles south of here yester(day. ° |
——— |
‘Magazine Features Story By Purdue Educator
A pattern for success in the insurance business is the theme of an article by Hal L. Nutt, director of Purdue University's {Marketing Institute, featured in 'a nationally distributed life insurance magazine, Mr. Nutt advises managers of field agencies to build their progress plans on patterns proven
successful by outstanding men in the field.
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