Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1951 — Page 3
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a, 1 ‘ MONDAY, DEC. 31,1050 __ _____ Set 5 _ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _*_°____ = Ee PAGE 3 ed | Acheson Sees Ti ighter Grip On Reds In 52 ... 1 T— Asserts U.S. | Ao i] ee pe
J. S. Russ Ooms
Dec. 31—The
bring pressure to stop Comyuntries from citizens for ic sources in-
n warning to ts minions in
| the most ef-.
nt a repetition iment of four a, pleased Friday partment paid ' imposed on he Hungarian med transport ts way on a any to Yugo-
Home
omed airmen, f Glens Falls, ed to fly here yracuse, N. Y,, ther. Capt. Swift to pital for about lewsmen about '" by Russian cials. ll were conferther steps. this Ake to make venture in inon.” tment already inst the Red ing Hungarian w York and American citi-
jecisions have re strategy, a 7 was believed
eo Place
put it, “if we t a recurrence nded business, » to go.” rtment set a directly to the y to secure the rmen held in ; against the d down from crossing, and ease were an24 hours later. | the logical to tell Russia rms that any stunts by the
Key to Peace
. predicted last night that the free . world will gain in 1952 the power
~ for the United States and her . Western allies in 1951, he said, but
© Jewish War Veterans, which pre.
Still Holds
NEW YORK, Dec. 31 (UP)— Secretary of State Dean Acheson
to take or withhold action “which’ will have decisive effect upon the cause of peace.” There were gains and losses
he firmly contended that at the year’s end ‘“we are better off than we were a year ago.” In a year-end summary of American foreign policy and the common struggle against communism, Mr. Acheson found that the “central responsibility” for mainaining peace still rests with the nited States—"“the one great repository of strength for those who value freedom.” ~
Speaks at Dinner
The Secretary of State gave his views in a broadcast speech at the annual award dinner of the
sented him its 1951 gold medal of merit for his efforts to stem communism and build a peaceful world. “During the past year the free world has gained in strength and moved appreciably towards| greater unity,” Mr. Acheson said. | “There are grounds for confidence, but there are no grounds for complacency. We cannot afford to let down at all .in vigilance, purpose and effort.” “What we are up against, in our | present defense of freedom, is| perhaps the hardest test our na-| tion has ever faced since the days of its founding. It is hardest because it calls upon us, not for a sudden burst of patriotic effort, but for steadiness, perseverance, maturity and understanding.” The Secretary of State gave the following global picture of! foreign policy developments: Eurqpe and the North Atlantic area—"The year 1951 has been a period of progress and growth, |o much of it beneath the surface « « « Mr. Acheson said the work of the North Atlantic Treaty organization’s military command “has gone forward, largely unseen, and gone far” under Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's leadership.
AT BROADWAY PREMIERE—Margaret Truman, accompanied - by French actor Jean’ Pierre Aumont, was among those present for the New York opening of “Caesar and Cleopatra,” co-starring Vivien Leigh and her husband, Laurence Olivier, While performimg Shaw's comedy, the stars are also playing Shakespeare's “Antony and Cleopatra” on alternate nights.
‘Charges Political Link-
Up—
Gundersen Balks at Serving
On Truman's Health Board Freakish CHICAGO, Dec. 31 (UP)—Dr. an unsuccesful advocate of com-| Weather Hits
Gunnar Gundersen, a member the American Medical Assoc tion’s board of trustees,
nounced yesterday that he had] |dersen’s
refused to accept appointment’
President Truman's commission| moved froth consideration as a Freakish
of |pulsory health insurance. ja-| “I certainly canhot subscribe an-ito such a masquerade,” Dr. Gunstatement said; “and to! {requested that my name be re-
to study the health needs of the/commission member.”
nation.
The LaCrosse, Wis., physicl
leased to the press as a member of the 15-member commission, named by Mr. Truman Saturday,
without his approval.
Charging that creation of the commission was a political move, |! Gundersen said “I certainly cannot subscribe to such a mas{querade, and have requested that Three important decisions |my name be removed from conwhich must be made early in 1952, sideration as a commission mem-
Dr.
he asserted, have to do with the ber.”
quality of European military participation in the defense of
Names 15 Members
| , os an| said that his name had been re- U. S. Output
Hits Record In 1951
WASHINGTON, Dec. 31 (UP) —S8ecretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer reported yesterday that gross national production of goods and services this year reached a record $327 billion. In a year-end review of the -na-
Issue New Type Birth Certificates
By JOE ALLISON ~~ Foolproof” ‘and EE merptoOt™ birth certificates now are being |{issuéd by ,the State: Board of Health in a move designed to halt a “dangerous flareup” age drinking.
Times July 26. At that time state
the practice.
tern.
Leaves White Streak
streak. If ink’ eradicator is used, the dots again disappear! In ad“void”
word to appear.
chine has | signing the certificates. It is similar to check-signing machines and prints a detailed pattern over the signature to {prevent duplication, Robert Yoho, records chief, faid.
Recommended By Police
The use of the special paper
|was recommended by police tech-|
{nicians who examined altered cer|tificates.
in teen- ’
The use of forged and altered | certificates was revealed in The |:
health officers promised to halt |
Under a new system, a special type of “check” or “bank” paper | is used for the certificates. It is colored with a special ipk- dot pat-
If an erasure is made, the inkdots come off leaving a white
dition, the eradicator causes the In addition to the special paper,
a “forgery proof” signature mabeen purchased for
| “Foolproof and Temoirprost'—
DO NOT TAMPER—This specimen birth certificate shows
how ink eradicator and erasures State Board of Health.
| Excise police chief C. B. France declared altered and forged certi|ficates were responsible for a “substantial part” of the teen|age drinking cases. State health officers said the!
{hausted, the system will be used
affect new type paper used by
new certificates are issued to all under-21 applicants and to all who request them by mail, When stocks of the old forms are ex-
exclusively.
Colorado
Dec. 31 . (UP)— closed high-,
DENVER, weather
ways and brought exclamations, hour operation for removal of a 'a cold, but he became so choked
of amazement throughout Colo-| rado. last week-end.
While more than two and a half feet of wet snow was falling in the high mountains, rain —unheard of this time of year —ifell in the lower valleys on the western slope of the Rockies. Three malin coast-to-coast highways were closed yesterday by slides, both snow and earth. One, * 12,000-foot-high Loveland, was opened soon afterward. Monarch and Berthoud, both more than 11,000 feet high, remained closed as snowplow crews
Awakens Bright, Chipper—
Child Hungry
Brain Tumor Operation
| NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 31 (UP) {—Pretty, 4-year-old Charlene Salter, semiconscious since a six-|
brain tumor Friday, awakenad| bright and chipper yesterday and surprised doctors by demanding 8| her breakfast. Charlene, blind and shorn of her .long chestnut curls, ate fruit {juice, scrambled eggs, hot chocolate and toast and suddenly be-| came very active, despite the fact! that the tumor may end her life] before the end of January. The daughter of a Korean war veteran was stricken three months ago. She became almost totally blind. Doctors said that if she lives, she may regain her sight, but no predictions could be made until laboratory tests of
After 6-Hour
foot. She also was worried about {his “cold.” Lt. Salter did not really have
{up when he talked to his little {daughter that he had to pretend lhe was not feeling well so she would not think he was worried about her.
Unaware Curls Cut Off
Charlene did not know that her lcurls had ‘been cut off. They had to be removed so the surgeons could perform the operation. But the nurses did not cut the curls until after Charlene was under the anesthetic, so she would not know about it, From the time of the operation at Foundation Hospital until yesterday morning, Charlene had
BEGINNING "WEDNESDAY AT 9:30 (our usual
opening hour)
CHAPTER 2 of
ben
Look right here on Page 3 of Tomorrow's
ate into the drifts with churning rotaries.
The unprecedented rain blocked represented UJ, 8. Highway 624 east of Grand
tion’s economic health, he said national output was 15 per cent higher than in 1950. About seven per cent of this
The White House announced Sunday | that the President had named 15 prominent lay and professional persons to undertake
Europe, and creation of a European defense community and a European Army. The Near and Middle East—/
the tumor are completed today. Life In Balance Technicians are trying to de-
ame U. 8. publengerous” de-
{been semiconscious and some{times delirious. But her nurse sald she awakened and said she
TIMES-for details!
{higher prices, he said, with the|junction i t-central Colorado| termine whether the tumor was WAS hungry. .” . ink, S {the study, including a study of unction in west-central Colorado et—————— aa AA t Opens Hare A Think We lost some! his own proposals for a national remaining eight per cent caused when it loosened dirt and rocks, malignant. If it was, there is | . Dec. 31 (UP) ‘ 1 health program. by increase in volume. /which fell to the roadway. One-|little chance that Charlene will [2 ’ : the Army Ord- Cites Iran Crisis To head the commission, Mr. During the year the space -of | way traffic was moving over the live more than 20 days. If it
wasn’t, the odd«”are that she will not die. Charlene had only one worry before the operation. She was concerned #bout her father, Lt. Earl Balter, Tioga, La., who re-
The Suez waterway.and Iranian oil crisis, he said, “offer danger-
advance in output slackened, he|road six hours after the slide. said. and in the final quarter the|
Service for 26 counties was 7. The office, nspectors, will }
THE MAN'S STORE
Truman had named Dr. Paul R
| ago hoous opportunities for exploitation Moin Bo Ohie age ohio. total volume of national output!
by the Kremlin.” On the ¢ther dministrator| V2% about five per cent above the hand, he pointed to- Greece and a aktans Siminict ator rate in the fourth quarter of 195¢. Turkey as bright spots which yo sy with VA Chet Carl R. * Mr, Sawyer said that, although
Of the rain, one weather forecaster in Denver commented “I've never heard of it this time of
| contracts in year before.” He blamed a warm
—— r— “have “steadfastly withstood cou-|Gray Jr. inflationary pressures eased oOff(fn rain. from. the Pacific forityrneq from Korea with a broken tii — 7 “tinued pressure from the Soviet gy stat ak|a8 the year progressed, the na- : ! Salli Semel Union.” Dr. Guiidersen o satement ac |tion’s economy still is faced with| Rain even rorfc 000. toot Gun-| | | {2 w > _ The Far East—in Korea, the t on Mr. many basic problems. Chief|Rison, -which only two weeks ago } ~N far has declined comment on Mr. was the coldest spot in the state © United Nations must guard Truman's action. among these, he said, are: Po e 8
«At the time I was invited to] ONE—To build militar y|With 30 degrees below zero, serve on the President’s new/|Strength as rapidly as possible |commission to study health prob- while maintaining a strong civil“The job in Korea is far from | {lems,” Dr. Gundersen said, “I ian economy, and to utilize both done,” Mr. Acheson said, “even| felt it most important to see the(large and small business and though much was accomplished President's’ statement of objec-|obtaining needed production. in 1951.” tives before my name was an-| TWO—To conserve and channel
nounced as a commission mem-|scarce resources to meet defense IU Medical
against “a renewal of Communist treachery” even if an arm- # istice is signed.
The 4M’s that make a good job at PREST-0O-LITE
Tip to Celebrants Too Tipsy to Drive
SALISBURY, Mass., Dec. 31 (UP)—Police Chief Grant E. Morse invited New Year's Eve celebrators to call police for a ride home if they are drinking in 1952 tonight. “An officer will drive them home in their own cars with no questions asked,” Chief Morse said,
FOR THE FINEST IN FUNERALS REGARDLESS OF PRICE
- Peace Chapel -
A successful business mast have skilled, experienced, and efficient employees. Through their dependability and enthusiasm they not only help a business grow, but 2 also help advance themselves.
To produce high quality ‘compressed gas evlinders and apparatus we must have the best steel and brass, in the right amounts, at the most favorable prices. This helps to keep production going at a steady pace.
a directive, but judging from any resurgences of inflationary |statements released to Washing- | pressures. versity Medical Center will slash|ships and in its objectives, to bejof current receipts, so far as their Yall minimum rate from/an instrument of practical poli-|possible. | The shortage of patients threatenad to reduce IU’s enrollment of (UP)—A C-97 Military Air Trans-| port service cargo plane with a hospitals must be filled to give more students bedside training. Air Force rescue at Hamilton Field dispatched a B-17 out over
ber. objectives without disrupting the [ton press representatives, by FOUR-—To obtain an approxspokesmen for the President, I imate balance in the defense] 50 to $9 tomorrow. tics, to relieve President Truman i A hope to attract from an embarrassing position as medical and nursing students at he very time Indiana needs more crew of ten limped into Travis Air Force Base near here yesterCounty welfare departments, which once provided 90 per cent the Pacific when the military
civilian economy, particularly to Hits Political Link small business. “I have not yet received such, THREE—To prevent or contain Rate Slash Ibelieve I am correct in assuming] period ahead between government | By BILL FOLGER {that the commission is designed] |expenditures and income so the! Hospitals of the Indiana Uni- both in its majority member-| defense effort may be paid out| more welfare and hospital insur- . ance patients to fill 200 empty beds. Plane, 10 Aboard, . Limps Into Base SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 31| octors and nurses. A week ago esterday Noble Reed pointed out n The Times that the Center's day after two of its four engines conked out on a flight from Honolulu. of the patients, have been sending more patients to other hospitals because, the Center’s min-
of
stratocruiser developed engine imum rate rose to $1550 a day. trouble 400 miles from San FranCovered Services cisco.
This covered not only nursing,| The rescue plane met the cripboard and care by staff doctorsipled craft .about 150 miles out but also surgery, laboratory tests,iand escorted it in to Travis withdrugs, X-rays and other special/out further trouble. services. The Air Force said the C-97's Beginning tomorrow, the min- inboard engines were not working, imum will be $9 a day for all but|hyt the exact nature of the _private patients. It will not in-itrouble was not known’ immedi‘clude any special services. They|ately. will be charged for if the patients) The cargo plane carried no use them. passengers.
The other system had been in|= ® effect since IU opened the first! * T Winter Term Beginning Jan. 2
hospital at the Center.. The new | Demands for competent secre-
rate will put the three hospitals—| Riley, Robert Long and Coleman! the state. Percentage Dropped taries, stenographers and accountants are tremendous. the high minimum rate was Joy The salaries are attractive and the only reason welfare cases had the opportunities unlimited. of their patients. These positions are permanent. They explained that as more . sive |
\
SOFTENS GRIEF
The simple dignity and elegance of a Peace Chapel service are a source of immeasurable spiritual consolation.
—on the same basis as others inl Medical Center officials sald] spBndapngon slumped from 90 to 50 per cent] as ov Sar Those who have had a funeral serviee conducted under the personal direction of
Another “must” that helps to make good jobs fe
Money must be provided for plants and equipment. skilled management. Trained leaders provide the
This is obtained from stockholders, and by borrow-
bought hospital insur-| Ther lead. i3 many instances, ' . ing. M fr les is needed to buy materials lanning that determines the growth of a business a rs noades J turn to| La ight, 74 mare respansibie Harry W. Moore feel they have gained a poi at ty ur and benefits. i I Emap ae it offers,
welfare. But most insurance plans hie ane oe are based on the system of charg- They really initiate Interesting, ing for special services only romising, profitable caree when they are used. So fewer insured patients were entering Center hospitals. The new system is aimed a : |
life-long friend, who by his intimate supervision, has made a time of
Buy and Evesing “> \ | bereavement easier to bear.
Free Placement Service Bulletin on Request
(ENTRAL BUSINESS COLLEGE
Indiana Business College Bids.
LINDE AIR PRODUCTS COMPANY
A Division of Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation 4
mE
Speedway, Indiana i .: Cisne rm hea
changing this.
Moral: Don't Die SYRACUSE, N. Y, (UP)—Even the cost of dying will go up here tomorrow. A 2 per cent sales tax will go into effect
and will apply to practically dy we evaspthing, incliding coffins and 302M. Meridian 34. ua . i The term “Linde” is & registered trade mark of Outen . oihay funeral items. : . u om - " - _ enn - i - { : - * a A ° 3; » o a@ pe, © bh i 4 i A» fe wi “ 5 Ee a . 7 i ? . A iz 4 dal
WDE WE ee La La (Vy Tap Sow eat al
