Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1951 — Page 2
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Negotiations
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was no word from the enemy up until a late hour, - © 0 per or
at Fame &
. of here Sunday,
na Student Inl.S. May
: Resume Tomorrow | Fear Order for
Return to Homeland
them with v
Serve Reds
2 Men Arrested in ‘Games’ Face Court |
~ Meanwhile, city police charged , held them in jail and them for Municipal Court 3 this afternoon. Police said that any further information about the men would| have to come from military! authgrities. ” At Camp Atterbury, Gen. Danel B. Strickler, commander of the 28th Division, declared the men were. “not real spies” but just make-believe enemy agents taking part in the war games which are being ‘used to train the men, Counter-intelligence agents had
UNITED NATIONS CAMP BENT NA By Sel Serv! LOW KAESONG, Korea, July 24 WASHINGTON, uly 24—ThirAllied aver chances
ty-five hundred Chinese students
for a cease-fire fnereased tonight ‘despite a new Ss nas of So Nations forces from Korea. United Nations quarters still looked for the Communists to back down on the demand at resumption of cease-fire negotia-
institutions study today In fear
SGT. PAK IN.SUK—North | Korean WKL interprets cease- [learning for the Chinese Commufire talks for Western press. nists. Of this number, 2817 are lstudying on American taxpayers’
; Hous In Kassong, Acheduins oF A h Li k Hot | 'money. "These had been careful8p. m. today (Indianapolis Time). g an A 96- Cc rou [enc IC ly screened and found to have
ino leftist tendencies.
| Already back in Asia are 365 lstudents, How many went to Comnmgunist China, and how many went to Formosa and how many] stayed in Hong Kong, the State Department does not know. One| : { group of 27 recently were escorted Halted In Deadlock Blame for the French Lick ho- through Communist lines by Hong’ “The talks will start again atitel’s financial foundering today Kong police. declaring that ghey 11 a. m, tomorrow, I guess,” was Jeid to fallure by its court Were going to ‘serve the people” United Nations spokesman Brig, appointed operator. of Communist China. ~ . Gen. Frank A, Allen said. Owner John B, Cabot, ealled to! Many of the 3500 Chinese stuThe negotiations came to a testify in Federal Court, sald dents still In this country believe temporary halt Saturday in ajprofits slipped away because the that most of those 27 who walked deadlock over the Red demand spa has not raised for withdrawal of United Nationsifive years. forces as a condition of an arniistice. :
recess in the negotiations expires 5 then. ‘United Nations répresenta- {4.5.3 tives nad noped the reas woud LIISIS DIMEN ON send word they were ready to re- ma sume before that hour, but there
blackmail. Their families were in He blamed the financial failure Communist China. They were ; on William O, Seeibach, former made to fear for the safety of Chief United Nations Repre- manager and now recelver in their families, Hence they took sentative Vice Adm. C. Turner/charge. He pointed out that Mr. back their American-made educaJoy made it clear that the Alliex/Seelbach had been named re-tions to “serve the people.” would not agree under any cir- ceiver at the request of the ho- 1950, the 81st
' " { Congress cumstances to put the withdrawal !¢/'s principal mortgage holder, Tam. A question on Pe agenda Massachusetts Mutual Lire In- Passed the emergency aid to ChiJ “surance Co. nese students act to help students
See Face-Saving | “A trustee and new manage- ‘!r4nded here by the victory of He said the question was a po-'ment could make profits and the Communists on the Chinese litical one, to be taken up at a liguidate the hotel's debts,” Mr, Waibland. - peace conference after an armi- Cabot told Federal Judge William Since then, two congressional stice had taken effect, E. Steckler. “It could be there for appropriations and one $500,000 It was at this point that the years, operating us a hotel, grant from the Economic Co-oper-Communists asked — and were! They've been selling things too ation Administration have given granted—a four-day recess. If cheap charging the same piices|$10,500,000 to pay for education, they stand pat on their withdraw- as five years ago. They've been subsistence and fares back to al demand, the truce talks almost taking conventions at $10 a day|{China for. 2817 students. This certainly will be brqken off, (per person).” {money will last until the end of “Some Allied ‘circles believed the) Mr, Cabot indicated this was 1952, when It is expected that all Communist negotiators, after con-|too low for profitable operation students will have completed their
sulting their superiors Jn Pyong- under current inflated prices. {education, yang, Peiping and possibly Mos-| The owner said net profits were | Permitied to Stay cow, will introduce some sort of about $100,000 in 1947, the year : y face-saving compromise proposal before Mr. Seelbach took over as last April, new regulations
tomorrow. |manager. Profits dropped sharply went into effect in the Depart4 W f B-29 {after that and the hotel went ment of Justice's Immigration aves oO LYS [$130,000 in the red last year. Bureau, permitting Chinese stu-
| He pointed ou there was less dents to st : : Smear Rail Junction lconvention business under Mr, | 18 12 Juay in this sountpy after
EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUAR- Seelbach’s operation, and prices they, had completed their educaTERS, Korea, July 24 (UP)--|were too low to make a profit on!tion, provided they are gainfully Four waves of B-29 Superfort-!these guests, employed. resses blasted the west Korean| The Federal Court appointed However, If they express a derailway junction of Sariwon to- Mr, Seelbach receiver in charge 16 sire to go back to Communist day with more than 70 tons of months ago. {China, there is no way to stop bombs, The general insisted they were them. There is no way of telling In ground fighting, United Na- only make-believe spies, but the/whether they actually want to
tions patrols stabbed as high Internal Security Division of the!llve ' in Communist China or as three miles into Red terri- Indianapolis Police weren't say-/whether they are going back only tory. ing anything today about two men to protect their families from the
The B-20s aimed their cargoes whd spent the night in jail. authorities, of 500 and 100-pound bombs at Counter-intelligence agents of Communist China stands to two adjacent railway marshalling the 28th Infantry Division picked gain much scientific, technical and yards at Sariwon, which lies up one man in the bus station, the engineering skill at the expense almost midway between Pyong- other in the Claypool Hotel late of American taxpayers from those yang, the North Korean capital, last night on suspicion of spying. who can be forced back onto the and the cease-fire conference city They turned them’ over to city po- Asian mainland. Of the 27 who
of Kaesong. lice until the “spies” could be walked over the border from The hombers ran into some handed over to military authori- Hong Kong, eight had redeived antiaircraft fire, but all re- ties. degrees in science,
turned safely,
Capture 3 Fugitives From Tennessee Here Three fugitives from Tennessee were captured by Indianapolis police today, and a fourth was being sought, Two motorcycles, on which they had fled from Tennessee, were parked in Coffey St.,, $00 block, and led police to the three fugitives, who are wanted in Lafayette, Tenn. for burglaries. Henry Forest Carver, 20. and Norma elan Moore’ Henshon, 18. were captured. A 17-year-old boy was arrested with Carver,
Crash Injuries Fatal
VALPARAISO, July 24 (UP) Mrs. Lois Davis, 23, South Bend, died today of injuries suffered in a traMec accident six miles north
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been given their descriptions and ordered to be on the lookout for them, he explained, The Counter-Intelligence Corps of the 28th Division said the two!
i
that their names be withheld. |
Planting Made Easy
PORTLAND, Me. (UP) — In-| stead of donning high boots to do| the spring planting on her suburban Portland farm, Mrs. Alice, Kern wore snowshoes, She fitted] over the muddy furrows while other “farmers got bogged down in their boots.
|
* ROCHESTER, N. Y. July 24 (UP)—An accidental death certificate was issued today in the death of Joseph W, Noga, 26-year-old World War II veteran. Mr. Noga died yesterday after he and a friend, Herbert Walker, ac-| cidentally bumped heads mixing cement,
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NOT ONLY do some people
the heretofore blank and sacred . walls of the State Senate. | ILE D'YEU, France, July 24
Gov. Behricker and members of (UP) —The body of Marshal Henri
the state legislative advisory com-| mittee will meet at the State | Philippe Petain lay in a black house next Tuesday to discuss coffin today, dressed in the uni-
what kind of murals artist Leon form of a Marshal of France. Kroll will paint. . Marshal Petain will be bu
Medaille Militaire—France's
TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1951 Very Well Trusted'— FBI Spy Names MIT Prof 1 Red in Secret Cell
By United Tress . WASHINGTON, July 24 — A Massachusetts ‘Institute of Teche nology professor was called: bes fore the House Un-American Ace tivities Committee today to answer charges that he was a mems ber of a iy aseret Communist underground group, Dr. Dirk J. Struik, mathematics professor at the Cambridge, Mass, University, was identified as a Communist in testimony by Herbert A. Philbrick, an FBI spy in the party for nine years. © Mr. Philbrick also identified two ther witnesses called today-— Dy Winner and his wife, Ri leen—as Communist Party members. Mr. Winner, he said, was personnel manager of the Con-
verse Rubber Co. Malden, Mass, The three were among more
HERBERT A. PHILBRICK—
» ” - i . A ALREADY THERE have been !Omorrow on this bleak Atlan many suggestions but few are fit island in that uniform, with According to Herb Kenny, leg- highest military hgnor—on islative bureau director, the Ab- breast. : has offered the state the murals vinced one day he will lie beside without cost. ithe men he led to victory at L u | Douaumont. Piel ig Ca sed | + Even before his death yesterday * |at 95 in the fortress where he was Ison ast {sent by a high court in 1945 for plosion which killed eight men in his family had started to fight the July 12 explosion at the Al-to clear his name. | lison Speedway plant, an investi-| | gating committee of company of- family to fight for a re-trial even Storms today. The issue of Petain's re-trial | “A considerable quantity of fuel M8Y Provide a stumbling block | Test Cell 89 and into the base- Mayer's bid for a vote of confi-| ment area,” the committee said. dénce from the National As-/ rounds saw no evidence of the Outgoing Premier Henri Queuille| leak at “3:20 a. m. Twenty told Marshal Petain's lawyer, Harry C. Welborn reported the decision on a retrial would be the leak. concern of the new government.
to print. bey Mural Painting Committee, Family and friends are con- | Verdun during World War I—at Leaking fuel caused the ex-|collgboration with the Germans, | Before he died he had asked his ficials reported to Coroner Roy B. Aftér his death. | had spilled onto the corridor of t0 Premier - Designate Rene A plant patrolman making his sembly, { minutes later Plant Fireman Jacques Isorni, recently, that a Vapor formed by rapid evapora-|
ignited by a running engine” in a (he assembly on a retrial might test cell nearby, the committee affect the outcome of Premier- |
said. i . Fireman Welborn or one of the) Te5ignate Mayers vote. |
other seven victims must have shut off the fuel because investi- Well Meant but Late
gators found the fuel valve closed] GREENVILLE, Miss. (UP)—1.
while after the blast which wiped out|/F. Franklin celebrated his 100th|Lillian Johnson,
20 test cells. ‘birthday, then registered to vote.|
'm. tr Marshal Pefain ‘had many fol-; Head-Bumping Fatal Mion of the fuel was “possibly lowers and a question asked in|
Spied on Reds for FBI. munists by Mr. Philbrick yesterday as the committee started an
Miss Goldrick, investigation of communism in
, the Boston area.
Ex-Teacher, Dies
Miss Kate Goldrick, retired In-|
Lectured at School
Mr. Philbrick said Dr. Struik
dianapolis public sthool teacher, lectured at a secret Marxist school’
died yesterday at her home, 4505 for social studies where “it was Carrollton Ave. She was 786, labsolutely impossible for anyone Born in East Brady, §a., she/to get in unless he was not only came to Indianapolis 64 years ago a bona fide Communist Party and attended public schools here. member, but very. well trusted.” In 1897 she began teaching. Dr. Struik also lectured at the She was director of practice of Commun ist -sponsored Sam the normal school at School 32 Adams School in Boston, and My. for a number of years. Later she Winner was active in the same
taught art and English at school, Mr. Philbrick told the School 2. committee. Services will. be at 3 p. m. Mr. Philbrick said there was
Thursday in Flanner & Buchanan little danger of mass Communist Mortuary with burial in Crown revolt if the United States beHill, comes involved in war with RusSurviving are two sisters, Mrs. sia. Hé warned, however, that Ruth Homsher, Indianapolis; Mrs. this country may be unable to Columbus, O., prevent sabotage in vital indusand a brother, Paul, Indianapolis. tries.
Z S Hynes & Co. FR anklin 4411
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than 50 persons named as Com- -
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WASH ernment that Vir for four some of i the feder the state. The ov to the a student, and what of gradu student | was invo Charle: attorney ing Office told the committe billion ve Mr. Ec! ment pr military such sol tary Ge¢ noted by quently 3 had been ( He sai istration recover ¢ payments —on the priety, i rather th The V1 cited by Office in mittge on schools © named st port four foots the had’ freq: The re payments had been of the sc an ‘“‘unu cases res fraudulen others re
- In its identified none of after Ec payment Teague | the sche VMI." Mi He said cause the monly ar tuition o residents Howevi Rights tl! tion pays veterans, Some VA both gro found no Wayne ney, said to have books in havg give students foots the He was schools t
Aunt After
A 2-m was ‘“‘abs was pick: Miss operates 2048 N. aunt, Mr baby hor She to been bus had pass today an newspape Miss C 2 a youn herself a her 2-mc nursery.’ later, shi $48 for the baby. heard fr aunt unt
Tosse Num
A man .. the 2400 Ave. last buildings bers racl squad at At 435 led by C: a crap | No game arrests r In oth baseball places: § books; 31 T 8S. Ne 216 Indi: Indiana . ana Ave. St., 14 be
