Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1951 — Page 5
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Odie .. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 7, 1951 __~ . - THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 5 ~ Visit to “Russia— Att oi : . | : som : 3
Look at ‘New World’ Cost 11 Years Fingerman Faces Conspiracy Trial
* . » ; . 4 4 o of Misery : 1 | William O. Daugherty, finger-of the sub-station at 961 S. West| He also asked thé court for By HENRY BUTLER | A
3 . i. y St, a year ago. “I wanted to see the. rte Prison Camps,” . published last]|ed, held in prison and much later | she found. As a foreigner from i p 1 an in the solution of two In-B D h t 8 no iz 38. sav of the testimony records where the new world was b y|March by Regnery of Chicago. informed she had been “convict-| outside the Iron Curtain, she : : |diana murders and nearly a doz- augherty, who made during his arraignment in That Wot Bon ork as built.” .Miss Lipper currently is doingled” of ‘counter-revolutionary”|was an object of interest. len “Marion County burglaries," the 25-year sentence in May|.m..... Haute and Federal Court PPer’'s reason |an intensive letcure tour on be-|activities, though she never en- Anti-government feeling is Ra : after he pleaded guilty to the for her 1937 half of the Int ; y g Bo iy |will be tried for conspiracy in a, ;p, charge. At the time, here. a are. D if of nternational Rescue|.ered a courtroom or saw a judge. |strong in the WSSR, Miss Lipper’ i Inost aftice’ robbery rolibery Be i Ts hea Doenl In Terre Haute he received a which tost her 1. eon Se, an organization dedi: “Her book, condensed in the believes “The Russians would re-| ; ; 3 {p St q-tice ery. Lo (however, he. sai phe a ies hen ev Years iw prison Bis 0 helping the thousands of | Reader's Digest last June, tells ofa if they dared to organize,! | y : 4 | Daugherty, now serving a 25- }-doubte crossed Yn ice .who| yea di oe. . a: bin } carps. erRoni who yearly .risk their|horror, cruelty, starvation and re-|but systematic arrests on all 7 : 1 year federal prison sentence on| promised me a lighter FETE io dhru i Be hes Here today to Toe Cr ape from behind the sultant high death rate in Soviet|levels of society keep them ter- [8 Sarge of Astually ong ence toi the ‘art the promiselfios: robbery pe a ies 25. ; : prisons, rorized,” she said. the robbery, pleaded not guilty e told the cour Jailed After Two Months She herself found the only way Hitler's Mistake to conspiracy when arraigned in|was given in exchange for in- year sentence. The stiffer penalty
“ address a lunch- h Like many other Europeans injto survive in ‘the terrible north- “yf Hitler hadn't been Hitler {Federal Court yesterday. (formation, Police denied the ac- was imposed here.
eon meeting at the Hotel Sev- \ ; the early 1930's, Miss Lipper, then|eastern Siberian climate of [during the German invasion, the| & & | He will be tried with Willian cusation. ’ he| app Digg hey op erin, Miss Lipper ® a pre-med student in Berlin, |Kolyma, a gold-mining and wood-| Russians would have yielded formerly of 2115 N.| Daugherty the ords in p
{ Banks, - 45, : . Salarged with thought communism promise d/ cutting camp for prison labor, was| their country to the invaders,” Arsenal Ave. accused of being|‘deals” when arraigned for a possible petition for umor, pathos {
again told of yester- {port ‘release and retrial.
his ‘accomplice in the $8 robbery day.
a n d eloquent Miss Lipper gestures on the material in her book, “Eleven Years in
Her enthusiasm was short-lived. Two months aftér she entered Soviet the Soviet Union she was arrest-
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well as a force opposed to Hitler, | {prisoners as human beings.
to treat her jailers and fellow-|
Even the worst of them could | be softened into some generosity, |
|
|
she added. When she finally freedom in 1948, Miss vowed she would do what she ‘ould to help those 'still ‘ened an estimated 12 million. Gov. Schricker was present at today’s luncheon for more than 90 guests, Robert A, Efroymson was chairman of the local spon soring co committee. >
Britain Orders Import Cut to
Avoid Bankruptcy
By United Press
‘LONDON, Nov. 7 -— Winston
{Churchills’ new Conservative gov-
|
ernment announced . an immediate cut of $980 million a year today in British imports from countries outside its pound
itrade area to curb a drift toward
wsdipat-rasve-in-a
national bankruptcy. The action of the government
mad - Aro.gtio. sonoma
arastic-economy
| program, means less food for al-
ready
|
|
continues, all the
tries. in. it area will
rationed Britons, a further tightening of the - belts of this country’s 49 million people. Chancellor of the Exchequer R. A. Butler, outlining ‘the gd¥%ern-
{ment program, said also that a system of quotas would be set
up for imports from European
countries. ‘Ugly Situation’ Outlining what he called an “ugly situation,” Mr. Butler said | that unless the terribly wide, {and steadily widening excess of
{imports over exports can be re-
duced: “We shall find we cannot buy what we ‘want. We shall, in fact, be bankrupt, idle and hungry.” Amid a shocked chorus of “Oh’s” from members, Mr. Butler
gave the grim figures of the drift toward economic doom
and financial
Britain's gold and dollar re-
serve is melting at a vearly rate of £3.840,000,000 a vear.
If the present rate of decline gold and dollar reserves of Britian and the coun-s-pound sterling trading be exhausted in one year. “Speaks for [Jtself” “The. gravity of the situation speaks for itself and it must be got right at once,’ Mr. said.
“We must immediately quench about the strength of
any doubts a
sterling
A Little Money
isterling and about our ability in the United Kingdom to manage its affairs effectively.
achieved = Lipper
SITTER SAVES SEVEN— Margaret Galassi, 17, Springfield. ll, herded the seven chil- - dren of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pitts to safety when the couple's 4.room farm home was ~destroyed by fire. Margaret was baby- sitting when defective wiring touched off the blaze.
Draft Board Clerk Held on Charge of Accepting Bribes
DETROIT; Nov. T (UP) — A draft clerk, who as a sergeant during World War .II was convicted of accepting bribes to keep sons of wealthy families in safe jobs at Selfridge Field, was charged yesterday with accepting money té&®put a draft registrant in 41-F. Myron Collins, 43, denied the charge when arraigned before Federal Judge Theodore Levin “I was framed,” he almost shouted: “The money was planted in my room.” The dapper ex-sergeant at the Air Force base near here was arrested by FBI agents Monday night when they found $100 in marked “payoff” money in a bureau drawer at his home. a = a J. A. ROBEY, chief of the Detroit FBI office, said Donald Williams, 22-year-old gasoline station owner, reported that Collins had “suggested” payment of $1000 or $1500 would win him a deferment When Mr. Williams reported the bribe to the FBI, he was given $100 to make the “first installment” on his deferment.” Mr. Williams said Collins promised to change his 1-A classification to 4-F. or indefinitely deferred for m edical reasons.
Gas from Pit Used to Drive Power Plant
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7 (UP) Secretary of Interior Oscar L. Chapman reported the prospect today of power plants running on
Butler coal which is never mined.
Mr. Chapman released a hureau of mines report on four years of experiments with the Alabama Power Co. at Gorgas, Ala. ing that low-grade gas can be obtained from underground burning
show
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“We must put beyond question coal which is untouched by a our determination to develop the miner's pick. The gas is suitable earning power which is needed to for driving gas turbines and for buy the food and raw materials generating steam. jupon which our island economy 2 = = depends.” HOWEVER, a Bureau of Mines i. Mr. Butler said that present expert said the quality of the gas talks in the North Atlantic De- is too low to make it worthwhile {fense Pact organization might to transport it any great dishave a “vital bearing” both on tance. It could be used for power Britain's big rearmament pro- plants near the site of the coal ram and its internal economy. beds e By this, Mr. Butler meant how much Britain may get from the United States in military aid.
400 Mental Patients
Evacuated in Blaze JACKSON, La. Nov. 7. (UP Fire destroved two buildings and badly damaged another at the East Louisiana state mental hospital here last night, causing an estimated $30,000 damage. Hospital Superintendent L. F. Magruder said he thought “in all {possibility it was the work of a
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