Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1951 — Page 2
A Course in Freedom—
CHILLY BUT PRETTY—Coated with frozen lake spray, this tree on the Chicago shoreline of Lake Michigan takes on an exotic shape.
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other players.
Pupils to Be Shown
What Americanism Is
Indianapolis schoolchildren will have an opportunity Monday to
pi cman ttt hh twtr See & pieview Ul & Unique Course
to be offered by Indianapolis schools next year, The program will be the Armistice Day ‘feature at the Murat Theater, with shows at 10:30 a. m., 1:30 p. m. and 4 p. m. An addi-
tional performance at 8 p. m. §
will be for adults. Highlights of the program include a brief speech by Anna Kasenkina, the Russian schoolteacher who made a dramatic “leap for life” from the Russian Consulate in 1948, and a dramatic sketch, “Flight Into Freedom,” by the Indiana University Theater group. . A Special Exhibit The project, sponsored locally by the Capitol Paper Co., is designed to teach the advantages of the free enterprise system and how it works in the businesses, industries and homes of Indianapolis. ’ ¢
A special exhibit, contrasting.
foreign home appliances with . those available in the United States, also is included. One of the graphic displays points out the advantages enjoyed by American workers. For example, a Russian worker must spend the earnings of 1224 hours of work for a television set with a T-inch screen. In the United States with lower prices and higher wages, the average citizen can buy a 16-inch set with the money he earns in 136 hours. Other exhibits point out the superiority of American home ap-, pliances and the more adequate supply. For example, a Swedish | refrigerator has a capacity of | 2.36 cubic feet and an ice capacity | of 11 ounces. American refriger-| ators range up to 12 cubic feet and have an ice capacity of four pounds. To Emphasize Statistics Wall signs will emphasize statistics on the usage of modern household conveniences in Russia and other countries as compared to the United States. In Russia, for instance, less than 1 per cent of the homes have electric refrigerators while 74 per cent of American homes are so equipped. For every three persons in the United States there are two ra-' dios, while in Russia there is only one radio for every 103 persons,
a Soviet citizen, after listening to Radio Free Europe, flees Russia and joins his sweetheart
Arto bing
Gort time Gud. % on pelt ya by
ANNA KASENKINA— Leaped from behind Iron Curtain. who had escaped three years earlier. Included in the cast are two Indianapolis residents, Patricia Wilsor, 4649 Boulevard Pl, and Jack Featheringill, 806 N. Chester St. ;
Bogus $10 Bills Again Turning Up in State Bogus $10 bills are turning up
in Indiana again, Secret Service officials here warned today.
Special agent George B. Loy
said the counterfeit bills apparently are coming through regular business channels from Cleveland, O., and Chicago, where he said counterfeit-
skillfully made — have several distinguishing flaws. The back of the bills are printed in duller
the portrait of Alexander Hamilton, Mr. Loy said.
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GAME MUST GO ON—A snowstorm couldnt’ stop hese Detrol high School football players as they prepared for a league championship game this week-end. s 3 Coach ed Rutherford ye Be strategy with Quarterback Frank Nemcheck and‘ skids and lands in a snow bank. Her co-office worker, Miss Peggy
Wage Control Problems Pile
An for Firms
vy ive i
By JOHN W. LOVE Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
Price controls have been gettingtthe lows recorded earlier this Saturday.
{pretty shaky, with the confusion {in nreat and all, and now the con{trols over wages are weakening. | This decay in both departments {is thought by some to forecast {another whirl of inflation, with thigher costs and prices generally. |If the controls collapsed, certain prices and wages would rise, it is true, but others might not folflow. A lot of businessmen and workers would be left in a lurch, though not exactly the same [lurch. Anyway, -the = controllers .in {Washington are getting edgy. {They not that ceilings on wages {are punched through in several places, like price ceilings, and the ireplastering job is frightening. The oncoming negotiations over the wages in the steel industry are a bigger concern.
1 Hinges on Steelworkers | If the steelworkers get more than 4 cents an hour increase— jand they seem pretty likely to, considering Philip Murray and ithe importance of the steel industry in defense and politics—the system of wage and salary control would soften all around. Various schemes are being thought up to detour this movement, such as lifting pension plans from all control and offering “productivity” increases all around. Employers’ headaches over wages are not confined to industries where unions are strong. Two industries that make machine tools and the cutting tools that go into the machines furnish examples. Both have been having difficulties with wage controls, but they seem to be opposite in nature. Machine toelers had to ask for the special right to raise wages above the old freeze points in order to meet the pay scales of industries that were taking their trained men. Would Be Embarrassed Over in the other branch, the manufacture of the tools and dies, ‘have some of the same troubles, but they are now threatened with
1
tion. This industry has perhaps 2000 concerns, scattered through the metal-working cities. Cleveland may have 150 such shops. . A panel of the Wage Stabiliza{tion Board recently came through {with a report in which the majority recommended wage maximums {for this industry which were far {above the actual scales paid. The {public and labor members agreed and the employer members obi jected. 3 Nobody is'going to be compelled by regulation to pay the new tops,
} of course, but competition works
in more than one way in such a {trade. “Pirating” of men sometimes {occurs in booms. The members {fear the effect of bidding. They suspect newcomers, or even oldlcomers, will raise pay to get workers, and before long they | will be paying wages higher than their price ceilings on the product will permit.
U. S. Aides Snub | Russ Event to Mark ’'17 Revolt |
| WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 (UP)— {The Russian embassy threw its annual shindig to celebrate the [1917 Bolshevik revolution toinight,, but most of official Wash/ington had pressing business |elsewhere. | Not a single member of Presi{dent Truman's cabinet showed up. Neither did any Congress-
The State Department was represented only by John Farr Sim-/ mons, chief of protocol. He said
| n » = i { EVEN THE diplomatic corps, {which traditionally is properly proper about honoring other nation's holidays, gave the lavish (affair a cold shoulder. Most ambassadors sent their attaches. British Ambassador Bir Oliver Franks was an exception, perthaps because Soviet Ambassador. (Alexander Panyushkin turned up at the British embassy last week
FR. 2565 to pay his respects to Princess Elizabeth, |
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THURSDAY, NOV. 8, 1051
¥
- WINDY CITY—A policeman and building doorman help two Chicago women buck vicious winds fo cross Michigan Ave. Chicago's share of the widespread storm was wet, windblown snow, which became ankle deep slush.
OOPS—With her coffee "to go," which she was carrying, really gone, Miss Doris Wolters (center horizontal) of St. Louis
Weitkamp, rushes to aid.
By United Press , Rain lashed the Eastern Sea-!southeastern Missouri, searchers Wind-driven rain swept the At- poard. More than 2 inches fell waited for the thaw to reveal the . i lantic seaboard today as a vast jh New York and 3 inches in Cape body of Bill Bounds, of Vulcan, Bullet in Wrist Found After 33 Years deep freeze settled over the snow- [jatteras, N. C. ' Mo. The 79-year-old hunter has - " choked Middle West, but the worst g ooo shivered {n Deen missing in dense woods NEWBURGH, N. Y. (UP)—For Presence of She alle: Jes. Ho early-season cold wave on record near-freezing cold. Freezing and since Monday's blizzard and his 33 years, John W. McCarthy, 59, Carthy was keptical. e su
showed signs of letting up. near-freezing temperatures were D0dy Was believed buried in the carried a World War I bullet in mitted to an operation, however,
st ted. I Cenie® Of ot of an accident. Mr. McCarthy that one morning in November, i The Chicago weather bureau at St. Lawrence University are normal in many séctions east of thawing temperatures tomorrow had higher scholastic averages bullet, causing considerable pain. an all-night artillery barrage. In Clark National Forest in compared to 73.480. Although the X-rays indicated ‘blood off and forgot . about it,
hooks like Winter's Over reported in the south Atlantic and deep snow. al his left wrist and did not know it. and there was.the bullet. Fone being,” @ Cniage east Gulf states. It was 28 above The discovery came as a result! Mr. McCarthy faintly recalls Center of the cold weather was ‘I Jackson, Miss. and 35 above Athletes Good Students West Central Illinois, Bradford, mn Montgomery, Ala. CANTON, N. Y. (UP) Athletes shipped and fell; {njuring his wrist: 1918; he noticed u triekie of biood FE il ¢ Foard, at en J predicted the Midwest would get good in the classroom, too. They The fall aparently dislodged the on his wrist after taking part in - He went to a doctor, who X-rayed Thinking it was nothing more i t had climbed from and. near-normal temperatures during the term than the total Ee Rovicies bux a body of men at the college—-73.583 the wrist. than a scratch, he wiped the ais yd ’ Co. 3 FR anklin 4411
week.
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