Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1951 — Page 28
PAGE 28
__THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
- — yo = “
ANGUS WARD, U. 8. Consul at Muiidon: China, imprisoned for 13 months by Chinese Reds on tramped-up charges of beating a Chinese em.
ployee.
DR. ALBERTO GAINZA PAZ, Editor of la Prensa, the newspape: shut down by
Argentina's Peron government for its
fight against dictatorship,
Seripps- Howard's Warpath
When Angus Ward, American consul in Mukden, was jailed by the Chinese Reds (Newsweek, Nov. 28, 1949), the LY nineteen papers of the Scripps-Howard chain chanted longest and loudest for his freedom.. When he was released, S-H could justly claim credit. - After Robert Vogeler had been imprisoned in Red Hungary (Newsweek, Dec. 5, 1949), S-H’s showcase, The New York World-Telegram and Sun, spread its campaign on his behalf throughout the chain and the nation. And Vogeler was ~ freed. As the doors closed at La Prensa _. of Buenos Aires, Joh# O'Rourke, editor fof S-Hs Washington (D.C.) Daily News, opened up one of the most spirited editorial campaigns on behalf of the great Argentine daily: ; Last week, the fifteen-man bureau ‘representing S-H. papers in Washington was putting its papers out in front of another fight—to force the release of the Associated Press correspondent William Oatis, imprisoned in Czechoslovakia on trumped-up charges of espionage. * Battle Stations: Four of the bureaus best men were working on the - story. Parker LaMoore was shooting out at least one editorial a week. Andrew Tully and Jim Daniel were keeping official press: conferences buzzing with questions about Oatis and blasting away at a story-a-day rate on how little was being done. Kermit McFarland was digging up facts on what seemed ‘to " be the best official key to Oatis’s cell— cutting off trade between America and Czechoslovakia. Elsewhere, S-H papers drummed up their own local angles by man-on-the-street interviews.
From THE PRESS: NEWSWEEK, August 6, 1951
A
§
“Grant us gree fearlessly to contend against evil,
and to make no peace with oppression; and, that we may reverently use our freedom, help us to
employ it in the maintenance of justice among men and nations.” Book OF COMMON PRAYER
. ®ecesee
SUNDAY, SEPT. 2,1951 |
- WILLIAM OATIS, Ametican newspaper correspon. :
den! in Prague, Czechoslovakia, sentenced after a
farcical Communist trial fo- 10 years in jail “for
"nYing”
ROBERT VOGELER, American businessman in
: Budapest, Hungary, jailed for 17 months for
“espionage” by same Communist court that condemned Cardinal Mindszenty te a living death,
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7 he Indianapolis Times
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