Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 January 1952 — Page 3
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By United Press SEATTLE, Wash. Jan. 12 — Darkness,-a howling wind, rain and fog tonight cut into the efficiency of search operations in| the North Pacific where turbulent waters hold the fate of 46 crew-| men who abandoned the American freighter Pennsylvania.
The Coast Guard said how-| ever, “we have not given up hope, | and the search will continue indefinitely—until we find the men| or have to give up in desperation.”
Two surface crafts, the Coast Guard cutter Klamath and: the Canadian weather ship Stone-| town, were the only vessels scour-| ing the mysterious black seal “after dark tonight. The Coast Guard said three commercial freighters had given| up the search and were heading for the West Coast because ad-| verse weather conditions made it impossible for them to continue, their operations.
Planes Back at Daybreak
The latest weather dispatch] from the Klamath reported fog and rain with winds westerly 45 to 50 mph and gusts to 65 mph.| The Coast Guard said 12 aircraft would join the search at daybreak tomorrow. Earlier today, eleven planes] _. were ordered back to their bases “after the Klamath radioed fog had blotted out visibility for the planes and reduced visibility for
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: the ships to one-half mile, Hubbard, USN, commanding officer, NOPI. with the student cast of the opera. ° ° ° : The planes had been forced to 8 y Sm --M € 2 1 Whi lewin-Farmersbur Ch led B 1! § Pp C i ) : . & fly above a 300-ft. ceiling and . oc. . Th d P| Fl where everybody is pretty proud ! ren in a e 2 in ur % their radar was “ineffective,” the B, L : ousan anes . rly of Ronald, Mrs. Russell Kibler is ; By United Prem a The couple also face the possi- his charges off to the temporary Coast Guard sald. 1g f eS ; OSI ng , In Defense Exercise coaching him for his stellar role, ANTIOCH, Cal, Jan. 12—Au- pjlity of losing custody of Theola, custody of juvenile authorities. Debris Found | | SELFRIDGE AlR FORCE Mrs. Kibler plays the piano and thorities Hireaioned laday to ftle the central figure in the case of Since then, the parents have ® | ASE rr 3 : “organ in the -Methodist Church charges of chi abandonment the curls. secluded themselves in the rame gE The search was centered 450 ants fo Nn igang So . - |{BASE, Mich., Jan. 12 (UP)—One tpere. against Amos Barton and his wife 4p. 00tv ordered the Bartons Shackle home on the outskirts of 3 miles off the northernmost tip thousand planes roared over seven mito ————— in their battle over whether their ("yoo case in Juvenile €ourt town and. have shown no signs : vf the Unied S1ates Whats debris| 1 diana has been getting new'in a few small Indiana cities had iowastern States Joday As 25000 daughter should go to school With j,, 95 why Theola should not be of relenting their protest “in from the Pennsylvania was found! ¢ about Taised capital for new industries g servers too Better Move her hair in pin curls. made a ward of the court as an principle” against the county and yesterday . industries at the rate of about : part in one of the biggest, day- . SW i ; . i yes y. ; : but in the majority of cases; ir detens ar . : The Bartons were fined yester- habitual truant. its school regulations. The Coast Guard said there 50 additional plants a year. there are no concessions. ng air ae ense exercises staged That C Wh {day for refusing to send the girl, : C AT was “no doubt” the 7800-ton| Th coming into Indi since World War II. ar en 5 : Theola has been kept out of ; ! { ey are coming Into lndlana; AN the pew plants coming to! From sunrise to sunset. air. - ) |Theola, 15. to school because of g.nq0) since last March when she Gov, Lausche of Ohio cargo ship had sunk. to manufacture about everything Indianapolis have built their oWn craft of all types operated by the Sweepers Start the pin curl dispute, and they wag gent home by Antioch High yas But there was no clue to the from nails to airplanes and auto- S€Wer connections and pPOWer cyyil Afr Patrol, Tactical Air A promptly retaliated by leaving genoa! authorities. Teachers told Will Seek 4th Term
fate of the crew. Capt. Allen Winbeck, operations officer of the 13th Coast Guard
i district, said the men would have close to freight distribution cen- ‘ gave the Bartons until Monday her hair. ’ woul k i ! ters 5 arkets in program designed to sharpen the Chappell, street commissioner. ildr r “gave” '‘s N Ould sek 3 fourth term as Ohio ¢ 3 50-50 chanes-f they igo away ro Be bipent But Is Put Back In eyes and ears of the members of The elites cars left rg 10 Slain ig hilqren Dey give Hes Nn Pubpe: governor and speculation arose In lifeboats.- ; ug Coa | MILWAUKEE. Wis. (UP) — the ground observer corps. the streets to Justice of the Peace Yates\ Since then the Bartons have immediately whether Price Stabile The last radio message from Most of Indiana's new indus- + ht, . ~The planes simulated enemy HE Hamm yesterday in protest heen in legal hot water because, izer Michael V. DiSalle would quit
i the Pennsylvania was ‘leaving { now.” It was sent at 6:40 p. m. (Indianapolis Time) Wednesday.
Hospital | Drive Opens Its Office
Offices for Indianapolis Hos-| pital Development Association] have been opened on the ninth) floor of Indianapolis Athletic Club, according to an announce-| ment yesterday. y i Chairman George A. Kuhn said| facilities are being assembled to) begin a multi-million-dollar fund) campaign to provide adequate) hospital facilities in this area, starting with erection of a Community Hospital on the East Side. Mr. Kuhn also announced| names of 20 new members of the Association board of directors. They are: | Mayor Clark, George W. Birk, | C. Harvey Bradley, William A. Brennan, Mrs. Lewis W. Bruck,| Joseph Cain, John’ Collett, Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt, Mrs. Sarah Goodman, Pierre F. Goodrich, William A. Hanley, A. L. Hunt, Herman W. Kothe, H. C. Krannert, Herbert F. Krimendahl, Walter W. Kuhn, W. I. Longsworth, E. Kirk McKinney, Miss Josephine M. Madden, E. B. Mar-| tindale, Glen V. Ryan, Dudley| Sutphin, Mrs. William H. Wem-| { mer, Harold B. West, Clark 8. Wheeler and Herman C. Wolff.
Composer Grofe | ‘Free’ Only One Day |
LAS VEGAS, Nev. Jan. 12 (UP)—Composer Ferde Grofe,| whose wife divorced him yester-| day because he “screamed at me| all the time,” married Anna May Lampton, 43, here today. When Mrs. Ruth Grofe divorced the composer of ‘“‘Mississippi Suite” and the “Grand Canyon Suite,” she declared that he injured her peace of mind by “running around with other women and bringing some of them to our, house.”
4 Children Suffocated
FRIENDSHIP, N. Y, Jan. 12 (UP)—Mrs. Glenn D. Tuttle's four children were suffocated in a fire late today as they napped in their two story frame home in this Alleghany County village, despite her frantic efforts to save them. .
® Tel Bh § . FATHER DECLINE
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SUNDAY, JAN. 13. 1952
Area Where |
S MEDALS—Killed in action in Korea with- | in 12 days of one another, Lt. Robert M. McGovern (left) and his | brother, Lt. Jerome McGovern (right) were postumously awarded "the Congressional Medal of Honor and Silver Star medals respec«Xs ie father, Halsey McGovern, said he would not accept | “1. © the awards for his sons because they were to be conferred by
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES di i a Tap
unt For 46 Adrift In North Pacific
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sme teint sabi & 2 ws: —— F sb Lad, 13, Will Sir ) armersburg Lad, 13, Will Sing New Opera Times State Service y BLOOMINGTON, Jan. 12— A pleasurable excitement prevails in the Homer Jennings household in Farmersburg because young Ronald Ray Jennings has been chosen to sing the lead-
ing role in the stage premiere of a new opera.
Ronald, .who is 13; will sing the part ‘of Amahl in “Amahl and the Night. “Visitors” by Gian-Carlo Menotti at Indiana University Feb. \ ; WE ; ; % ; 21-24. The ybung singer was : £5 e chosen following auditions held at the university here, Dec. 15 and 29 The television premiere of the (opera given Christmas Eve over the NBC network was hailed by newspaper critics as an outstanding success. Chet Allen, 12-year-old Columbus, O., choir boy then rose to fame as Amahl.
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THE OPERA tells the story ot a crippled boy who meets the Three Wise Men on their way to see the Christ Child. The hoy gives his crutch to the Wise Men as a present for the Infant Jesus and is miraculously enabled to walk as he does so. :
Ronald Jennings has had no formal voice training but is what. might be called "a natural-born singer” whose mother and grandfather both were vocalists. The : ’ . a hay has made public appearances Farmersburg, ‘sings for his parents with Ernst Hoffman, musical director of the Indiana University HIT PEAK FOR POLIO—Miss Helen M. Summers, secretary of the Marion County Polio Chap- since he was 10 Opera Department, accompanying.
ter, receives check for $3485.56 from the Naval Ordnance Plant's 2600 employees. It's 10 times His mother. Mrs. Jennings, will
as much as the local plant's-previous generous donations to the March of Dimes. Left—Clair M. spend with him the necessary Pp 1 Gi D d : : Nebel, president of plant employees’ Welfare and Recreation Association. Right—Capt. Miles H. time on the campus for rehearsals arenrts iven ea line to Claim
PROUD FAMILY — Ronald Ray Jennings, |3-year-old son of Mr, and Mrs, Homer : ¥nnings,
——— SE
ines. : IN “clean sweep” of Indian- five of their nine children With {ha parents the girl was not TFET UP rte Command, Air National Guard apolis streets starting tomorrow the judge. aA to oo regulations COLUMBUS, :0. Jan. 13 (UP) units and the Naval Air Reserve will take everything in front of ji . . ° — Gov. Frank J. Lausche, a
She Wanted to Get Out criss-crossed the Midwest in a the broom aciordng ts James Probation Officer John A, Davis by showirig up with pin curlers in Democrat, announced today he
mobiles mostly because of the state’s wide open spaces that are
tries—about 160 of them in the Someone once said that you can't pombers in a raid over Michigan, a program will start on E. against a $20 fine, as Mrs. Barton told Mr, Hamm in to campaign for the senatorial
last three years—migrated '0 please.a woman and at least one Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois, jchigan and E. 10th Sts, be- Mr Hamm said he and juve- court yesterday, “I don't intend to race. Hoosief soll trom, Chicago, helpful Milwaukeean agrees. Wisconsin and a part of West Vir- Iween East St. and Emerson Ave. pile authorities have since re-be the puppet of any dictator- = In . Washington, Mr. DiSalle Detroit and the larger, conges- : ainia Police will post no-parking signs ceived “dozens of calls” from ship.” sald he still hasn't decided whethe ted industrial centers of the East. He stepped in when he spotted © on these streets tonight. C ; 5 “®>*'a young woman driver futilely re - 5 Tees night. Cars persons seeking to adopt the The five children, ranging in er he will oppose Republican John The main reason for selection y, [ion ang out of a tiny park- Donates Park Fund left there will be towed in by children. age from 3 to 11 years old, W. Bricker, but that Ke& Will ane of Indiana sites for new indus- ing space. Fifteen minutes later ! . un police. 5 ‘Under Your Skin’ were left ‘in the court corridor nounce his intentions by Jan. 22, tries is room for expansion, ac- 4,0 oo Coon ked in ih WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (UP) This 4s an expensive job, “I don’t anticipate it will come for Mr. Hamm ‘to clothe and two weeks before the tiling deadcording to statistics in the State [0° C&T FAR HEY IK tions John D. Rockefeller Jr. has said Mr. Chappell, “and there's to adoption, but it's a possi- feed and educate . .'. to your|line. Division of Commerce and In-| 20% ate $ to his directions given the government $100,000 to no use wasting money doing it pity” Mr. Hamm said.. “I standards.” Until the Lausche _announcee dustry. . ges . buy Linville Falls in western half way because cars are left on visited the kids late yesterday) Mr. Hamm, a 58-year-old father ment, ‘there had been speculation
“Thank you very much, sir,” the North Carolina for recreational the streets. It will continue on a and they are a fine looking group./of five of his own children and a'here that M wou ver) . | 3 \ s r. DiSalle woman said. “This is very nice, use, the National Park Service daily basis until the whole city They kind of get under your grandfather of four, declined the the governorship and Mr. I
“Dozens of long established |p 1 m i i » ” firms in Chicago ahd Detroit] Uh] Was SEVINg 30 Lei. out announced today. is cleaned up. skin. ________._|responsibility of the gift and sent would try for the Senate.
Be Be a — A : NATION AL'S WAREHOUSE MOV p vue somse smmstouns S727 oe
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No Place to Grow
Marion Ayers, State Commerce Division director. “They have to have more room and Indiana is the logical place to find it and still stay near the center of distribution—24 hours | shipping service to either the| East or West Coast,” he said.
Also the migration of industry to Indiana has been aided by| some advantages in local taxes over many of the larger cities in other states. Another advantage is labor supply and the fact that labormanagement relations in Indiana is somewhat better than in some of the eastern industrial centers.
Industries also are finding some. advantage in Indiana on wages. Union pay scale minimums in Indiana are about the same as anywhere else but companies in some of the larger cities have been forced to pay above minimum scales due to manpower competition. }
Another factor bringing industries to Indiana, according to Mr.| Ayres, is the state's adequate supply of power. | a Lots of Power
“Plenty of electric. power is. available ‘for industry almost! anywhere in Indiana,” Mr. Ayres said. ‘‘Some of the other larger industrial states are up to their limit 6n power supplies.” |
New plants coming to Indianapolis recently were Westinghouse (two plants); Chrysler Corp. (Dodge plant) and Western Electric.
One of the hig Chicago firms moving. to Indiana in recent years in the Cuneo Press which had to have more space and better working conditions to print several magazines. It has been located in. Kokomo in a new plant. Few, if any, of the new firms are coming to Indiana because of financing offers or free municipal services. Mr. Ayres said business groups
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