Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1951 — Page 1

20, 1951 |

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8-Month Extension 0f Controls Voted By Senate Group

By United Press { WASHINGTON, June 21-The Senate Banking Committee voted | 12-1 today to extend wage, price and rent controls for eight months, but refused fo reverse its previous decision to ban price rollbacks. Ignoring a last-minute plea by | Price Chief Michael V. DiSalle to let him order price rollbacks, the committee voted 7 to 6 to sustain its earlier veto of rollback au-| thority. | Sen. Irving M. Ives (R. N. Y.)| and three Democrats led the unsuccessful fight to reverse the

S

[scamps —nowarn§ 62d YEAR—NUMBER 111

IT WASN'T EASY TO DO THIS—Times Photographer Lloyd B. Walton thought he was out of focus when he spotted this sign at Illinois and New York Sts. Drive spelled backwards should be evirD, but it isn't.

Deanna Durbin Gives Birth to 91-Pound Boy

PARIS, June 21 (UP)—Actress| Deanna Durbin gave birth yesterday to a nine-and-a-half pound son, her husband Charles David announced to- | day. i { The boy was named “Peter Henry.” J Mr. David said: “Everything went fine. I took Deanna to the clinic at 5 p.m. yesterday and the baby arrived at 6:30 p.m. It was all very exciting.” Miss Durbin The French-born, U. 8. naturalized movie producer said he and

committee’s previous action in| banning any price rollbacks be- | low Jan. 25-Feb. 24 l3vels.

The effect of this provosion if] |

finally enacted, would be to kill two scheduled beef ‘price rollbacks on other items. Mr. DiSalle claims the provision

Miss Durbin were married Dec. 21 in a “quiet ceremony” at Saarguemines, France.

{

Doug Makes No Show | For Old Harvard Degree

¥

(Read It Backwards, Chum)

9

GOP Workers Say They'll Boycott

Rich Man's Party’

A sharp rift developed among Marion County Republicans today

‘lover the $100-a-plate Freedom

Dinner sponsored by the State

The Indianap

THURSDAY, JUNE 21,

7Tuo Ti Ekam Uoy Nac Yeh

MAGIC IN THE DARKROOM—Cameraman Walton unscrambled the puzzle by printing his negative upsidedown and backwards. It came out drive, but this time not right. The city denies having a Chinese painter.

And That's All, Folks—

Runs Mostly:

By United Press

~— President Truman said today he has no plans at present to in-| tervene in the pilot's strike against United Air Lines. i He also said that inter-Amer-| ican relations are better today than at any other time in his-|

GOP Committee here the comingitory. This was in connection |

Saturday. The affair, ridiculed by rank-

and-file GOP workers in Indian-

apolis as a “rich man’s party,” drew fire from some of the key party officials here chiefly because none of big money will be allocated back to the local party’s depleted treasury. Consequently, few of the regular GOP workers here will attend. “Can’t Afford” It

“We can’t afford to attend such a rich man’s party,” said one key party official. Several of them said they will

would cost the public 52 billion in| ' CAMBRIDGE, Mass. June 21/2tend- however, with tickets {oer ’ pa |given to them by their well-to-planned price rollbacks, result in| yp) .- Harvard University en to y

a “much higher” wage-price levels and “disrupt and endanger the entire stabilization program.” The House Banking Committee also has voted to forbid the two planned beef price rollback orders which are aimed at cutting consumer beef prices by 8 to 10 cents a pound by next fall.

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

awarded honorary degrees to 14 Americans at its 300th commencement today but couldn't get rid of one it has been saving for Gen. Douglas MacArthur. University authorities named! Gen. MacArthur and the rest of]

the nation’s top World War IT) leaders for the degree in 1946.| The others came to Harvard toy receive their honors, but he has| never made a show. University! policy forbids the granting of) honorary degrees in absentia. 3

Despite the general “boycott” of the affair by most party workers here, State GOP Headquarters officials announced that more

Continued on Page 3-—Col. 3

‘Eager for Work’ PITTSBURGH, June 21 (UP)— Thomas Leighty, 87, who turned up after being missing for 39 years and declared legally dead, said today all he wanted to do was “find some work and leave everybody alone.”

6 a. m.. 64 10 a. m.... 74 7a m.. 66 11 a m.. 7 8 a. m.. 68 12 (Noon) 79 9a m,. 71 1p m.. 81 Latest humidity ...... 52%

Outside Indianapolis—

or

John Bull Prefers Color to Stea

By ED SOVOLA Mr. Inside Indianapolis

LONDON~—The average Englishman would rather thrill to pageantry and wallow in tradition than eat a good steak. He's doing it, too. I had a good view of the Trooping of the Color from Buckingham Palace, Princess Elizabeth took the ailing King’s place on this annual event. It's

the King's official . birthday duty. As parades, brass bands,

military discipline -and showmanship go, the Trooping of the Color was a fie spectacle. Britishers lined the route of the parade as early as 8 a, m. The real business didn’t start until 10:35. A phone call to the American Regional Advisor for Information, Mrs. Mary Agnes Hamilton, got me a place on the terrace of the Carlton House, overlooking Horse Guards parade grounds. I arrived at 10:30. ” 5 ”

IN FRONT of me, as I entered the Carlton House to check in with the guard, was a couple in their middle 30s. The man asked the guard if he and his wife could go to -the terrace. The guard inquired if they were friends of anyone hé knew. The man said they were friends of Mr. Truman. Americans. The guard jumped three feet in the

air, got on the phone and in a

Continued on Page. 8~—Col. 2

#4

with the current visit of President] Galo Plaza of Ecuador. { That was about the extent of] the news at Mr. Truman's week-| ly meeting with reporters. Most | of it was a long series of “no| comments” on questions involving | the big issues of the day. At the outset of the confer-! ence, Mr. Truman was asked) whether he planned to do anything about the air line strike. He answered simply, not at present. The dispute was referred to him yesterday by the national mediation board. Neo Comment Then a reporter wanted to know what he thought of Gen. Douglas MacArthur's contention that the Chief Executive had gilenced ‘pertinent witnesses” to the circumstances sufrrounding the general's dismissal as Far Eastern cmmander. No comment said the President. Asked about a reportéd United Nations peace proposal for the Korean War, the President said it had not been taken up with him and he did not believe such action would be taken without consulting him. “Do you think it will be possible to control inflation and keep prices down under the bill as it is taking shape on Capitol Hill?" a reporter asked. The President said he could not

On the Inside Of The Times

How-De-Do buffet supper and .dance planned -at Meridian Hills Country Club Saturday evening . . . Blackwood on Bridge . .. articles of interest to women readers... . couse Screen idol Clark Gable has his sights *on the title role in “The Life of Ernest Hemingway” . . . but there's one catch in it . the story hasn't been written yet . . . read Erskine Johnson's col-

10

“What Goes on Here” , .. an interesting roundup of happenings around the Crossroads of the Nation ........ Our Indians hang two defeats on the Minneapolis Millers as a belated birthday present for skipper Don Gutteridge .. « Mallory and Vestal base-

21

ball teams to battle for Amateur Day berth ... Joe Williams 8ays ..evsvesvans 32

Other Features:

Bridge .....¢.. anssssases 14 Crossword scoeesesssevses 12 Editorials «.ceosesrsenses 24 FOU i..ineesssnrsnvsas 24 Erskine, Johnson .,...... 20 MOVIES Ci vvracarvnrsesss 20

Frederick C. Othman ..... 24 Eleanor Roosevelt ....v.0 15 Side Glances ..ussceieesy 24 Society .e.icivinvrnssrns 10

Sports ..........s 31, 33, 33

Day's White House News No Comment

.|Fall Creek and dragged into the

umn “In Hollywood” ...... 20

Entered as Second-Class Matter st Postoffios Indianapolis, Indians. Issued Dally.

1951

Raid

Hurley Urges Senate Probe 0f ‘Surrender’

Declares Yalta Red ‘Blueprint’ WASHINGTON, June 21 (UP) — Former China Ambassador Patrick J. Hurley urged today that the Senate make a complete investigation of the 1945 Yalta “sur-

render.” : The 68-year-old former soldierstatesman told Senators investigating Gen. Douglas MarArthur’'s dismissal that the full story be-

should be spread on the record. the Western

1945, that

olis Times

FORECAST: Occasional thundershowers tonight and tomorrow. Little change in temperature. Low tonight 65, high tomorrow 85. ;

‘The Company Must Go'—

Iranian Mo

hind secret deals made at Yalta

It was at Yalta in February, Allies promised Russia vital concessions in Manchuria and elsewhere in — return for a pledge that the So-

»

a Refinery After Seizure

Street Throngs Cheer 90-0 Parliament Vote

{of Germany. Red ‘Blueprint’

tain. Mr. Truman also brushed off efforts to draw him out on a charge by Sen. Joseph R. MeCarthy (R. Wis.) that Gen. George C. Marshall, Secretary of Defense, was master-minding a conspiracy of which the President was unaware. He would not discuss the Iranian oil crisis, the new arrests of 21 Communists, or the proposed 10 per cent reduction in the number of executive branch employees. Asked whether he would make a “whistle-stop” tour in the late}. summer or autumn, the chief executive said he could not answer until he knows what Con-

{Japan’s home islands. But Mr. Hurley charged tha

Communists with their “blue

China.

made. ‘Complete AlibY’

Woman's Screams

conference.

Senators.

Yalta agreements as

On City Bridge

way for his defeat.

viets would go to war against Japan six months after the defeat|Chinese Communists withdrew the

Administration spokesmen have said the deal was made on Allied 8 military advice that Russia's par-|the western front. * entib i Xm Bat th ticipation in the Pacific War was jeomment un e ew wha e | necessa to keep down casualWASHINGTON, June 21 (UP) final version of the bill could con- ties in 8 th tod assault on

the Yalta concessions were a “surrender” which provided the

print” for their later conquest of |}. penetrated deeply beyond

He also charged former Secretary of State James E. Byrnes and some Democratic Senators with being party to the “immoral” act of keeping the Yalta agree-

ments secret long after they were Another was listed as probably

The late Edward R. Stettinius Jr., was Secretary of State at the time of Yalta, but Mr. Byrnes was a member of the American

party. gress is going to do. | Today Mr. Hurley noted tha {Mr. Byrnes, now governor of

» { “I think possibly that proves a I ve a0 er complete alibi,” Mr. Hurley told

Mr. Hurley has attacked the knifing Chiang Kai-shek and paving the

last of their troops from Bouth Korea Thursday as United Nations forces drove into Kaesong, just south of the 38th Parallel on

t

For Ouster of British By United Press TEHRAN, Iran, June 21 — The Iranian parliament unanimously approved seizure of the British-owned AngloIranian Oil Co. today while crowds stormed the firm's main offices to raise the national flag. (British tanks and heavy artillery were on the move through the Red Sea to an undisclosed destination near Iran, unconfirmed Arab re. All: : ports from Cairo said today.); A five Police did not try to stop : the Iranian crowds who shouted . : anti-British slogans and ripped f Chinese 4 * |down signs inside and outside the , AIOC building. The Iranian govContinuing Crisis . + + 80 From South Koreg _cudomsl --.-....0... pase 5 ernment began taking over the. : company’s installations in the World Report, Page 25 southern ofl fields yesterday. By EARNEST HOBERECHT Premier Mohamed : United Press Staff Correspondent won his vote of confidence by 90 TOKYO, Friday, June 22—Theito 0, with one abstention. i Thousands Cheer Several thousand persons cheered and waved banners and flags outside parliament as the premier told parliament he needed Kaesong, 35 miles northwest ofthe confidence vote because “the Seoul and three miles from the cOMIpany must go." : Parallel, was the first major city] Mr. Mossadegh spoke for 20 to fall to the Reds when they! minutes He 4giq the ofl Bapats i d reached inva ed South Korea June 25 last = with the of the Enemy - troops near the east|AIOC installations. coast fought stubbornly to stave] He read and attacked the off 8th Army troops who already British reply to Iran's final note on nationalization and said he the Parallel into North Korea. |had sought to reach an agreement Poor weather brought an end but: to the air battles that were| “It is now obvious that all are waged below the Manchurian bor-|28greed the company must. go. der for four days, resulting in de- ; Mobs Toumed Tetan Sesthoy: .|ing signs - filling ( struction of nine enemy planes Notions] Mata to the city destroyed. in cars to urge mass demonstra~ Tanks and infantry moved into|tions tonight against the ofl com~

Kaesong and met rifie fire from pany. isolated individual enemy infan- pte Segied the company apa trymen on the ridges overlooking| Main ofice Qors at after the city. all employees had been out. There were no reports of

United Nations patrols had en- any injuries. The British Embassy sald it

: tered the town before dawn yes-

|South Carolina, says he had “no|terday and again in the after-i, uid protest the incidents. knowledge” of any secret deals| at Yalta until months after the

noon. British army and air force units

in the Middle East ve been alerted, with a warning! force {will be used if necessary to protect British lives in Iran. (The British cabinet met in

Crash, Killing London under Acting Prime Minister Herbert Morrison to consider

1, Injuring Three the next step in the worsening oil

TERRE HAUTE, Ind, June 21} iq) (UP)—A city fireman was killed] At Abadan, site of the coms

Emergency Cars

A distraught Cincinnati busi-| nessman today raced to Indian-| apolis to the side of his brunet | wife, who was subject of an attempted attack here this morning. His first knowledge of her whereabouts came from The Times informing him of the at-| tack. He said his wife, who has] been mentally ill for four years, ran away from their Cincinnati home last night. The attractive woman, clad in| bright yellow shorts, white halter | and low-heeled shoes, was seized by a six-foot man at the west end of the 16th St. bridge over

Can A Hoosier

What's wrong with Hoosier women? That's the challenge asked in Tihs Times tomorrow by reporter Phil Berk.

For years Indiana girls have been competing with young ladies. from all over the country in the annual Miss America contest. Yet never has a Miss Indiana become Miss America. Reporter Berk comes up with one important reason why Hoosier lovelies find rough sledding at Atlantic City. Don’t miss his story in The Times tomorrow.

tangled underbrush. | When he took his hand off the mouth of his kicking victim, she yelled. He then dropped her and| fled. Police Spread Dragnet

Police immediately spread a dragnet around the Fall Creek lowlands between 10th and 16th Sts. hs searchers hunted through

he wilderness. : t i of the search, | After Taking

police cars formed a circling) cordon around the 6-block area las other patrolmen attempted to hunt the attacker in the dense

underbrush. | Said one perspiring policeman, | since the day two years

a problem rabbit.

Rabbit to Miss TV Hobby—

Susie Ku Faces Rabid Test

Suzie Ku hadn’t meant to be

She always was an ideal pet ago

and his chief and two city police- pany's enormous refinery, Iran men injured critically today when |ians refused to talk with British officials of the company because

* . 2 [two autos speeding with scream- they had brought in t Win Beauty Title? |; sirens to the scene of a gas sane oa & emmeser oh

explosion collided at a street in-| tersection.

Bill on Sabotage Authorities believed the acci-|, Al anthsabotage bil also was ntroduced at the session. dent occurred because the oc-| 1 rovides for Ities cupants of each car could not| f pro penalties ranging hear the siren of the other be-|y orn three years to death for decause their own siren drowned |/1Derate damaging of the ATOC'S i ow. {fata seincey tr Seber tala The dead man was Richard] Gray, 53, an instructor at head- h Sovernment TOPTEaenL A LY quarters fire company. ya a an an ver ae Injured critically and taken Joi vas ans . TE oil ah ATOC St. Anthony’s Hospital were Fire |: nkers ap ng rts Chief Genis Nichosen, 49; city po-| However 4 bo Makki '& lice patrolmen Walter Thompson, |. ber of the ofl commission nd 33, and Wayne Jones, 34. i . al No one: was injured in the ex- secretary-general of the National Josion |Front, said he would shut down postion. the refinery unless tanker cap[tains sign receipts made out to the government's Persian Na tional Oil Co. One thousand cheering, fist shaking Iranians ‘pushed past ° : 3 steel-helmeted Iranian troops and Bite at Master followed Mr. Makki to the courtyard of the refinery to applaud the raising of the Iranian flag. King Baker Ross, British head of the refinery, and other British officials watched the flag-ralsing from a balcony. Mr. Ross indicated later that he would turn off

WOMEN'S +osvencvssennsva 18

“you could hide a truck in here.” At General Hospital, where the woman was treated for bruises, she gave an incoherent account of the assault. The worried husband said his wife. mother of two children, had attempted to take her life pre-

{ Louisville, Her assailant escaped and fled into the almost impenetrable dumps and bottomlands when the woman fought free and screamed for help. 4 Police and doctors said the woman was not raped. They said, however, she described her assailant as ‘“‘murderous” and repeatedly sobbed: “He was going to kill me, I pleaded with him not to kill me.”

-

Continued on Page $-OCol 4

{viously by slashing her wrists in|

"Fully armed squads of police| In& her nails today'and she bite hutch.

when she first came to the home of her 12-year-old master, Tommy Hotsinpiller, 539 8. Harris 8t. “She was just like another kid around the house,” Tommy's mother, Mrs. Sylvia Hotsinpillef, sald today after the trouble. “She would hop right in the {living room and sit up on the {davenport and watch television, {right along with the rest of us,” | Mrs. Hotsinpiller said. | Her favorite show was Kukla, | Fran and Ollié, no doubt, and if |WFBM-TV carried. the program as it is telecast Susie would probably start a fan club for Fletcher Rabbit. But today Suzie is just another police case. Tommy was inspect- Suzie to- spend

him. The punishment must fit the| They want to | crime, §0 police taday ordered Suzie isn't a rabid 4 Ww EN hey i i a bas

¥ hep

A : : ia,

10 days in the ’ be sure that! |,

the flow of oil to the refinery if

“I'm not going to argue with a man with a rifle and a bayonet,” he said.

Some Fun

the Iranians ordered him to do so.