Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1952 — Page 13
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‘By Ed Sovola
AN OFFICER of the 1952 Titer apolie Home Show reported that several.-persons viewing the drawings of 223 architects in the Architectural Competition turned their noses up in the air, “They walked in and looked around and hurried out,” he said, wistfully. It takes so little to worry some people, doesn’t it? I walked in and looked and stayed a long time. “0 did a lot of others. If you missed the exhibit at the Construction League of Indianapolis, mentally give yourself a little boot. The present and future home owner. had a great opportunity to see a trend in building that ought to make everyone clap their hands and, with no misgiving at 1, sing a chorus‘ of “My Old Kentucky Home.” oe oe oe ‘A ROOF is a roof and when walls are added ou ean call it a dwelling. Well, the 223 architects
« had roofs and walls and, in-the main, toyed with
the famfliar rectangle. . But; what they did: with rectangles is one low threshold ‘away’ from being miraculous. Naturally, that's my opinion. And my opinion grew from a close association with a six-room house whose outer design could ve duplicated by any normal third- -grader in 10 ninutes. In my old neighborhood were homes, happy ones, too, that looked as if they had all come from the same packing case. You know the type. Start. ing with the hideous, wide front porch, you walk into the front room, bedroom on the side, living room, bedroom and bath on the side, kitchen and another bedroom on the side. Barn. It wasn’t enough that the arrangement was levoid of all imagination, the builder had to inAude a towering roof with nasty eaves that were the devil to get at and paint, It's a wonder all the houses in our neighborhood haven't turned Blue or turned to ashes. . GN TODAY, even the home that rattles your indate streak of conservatism combines utility with convenience and, best. of all, incorporates eyéappeal. Among ‘the entries in the Indianapolis Home Show Architectural Competition, you can find dozens to suit any imagination. I heard a lady call No. 195 a “hothouse.” It was designed by David J. Jacob, Cranbrook Acad-
it Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Jan. 30—Something subversive has happened to American men. They've taken 0 chattering about their clothes like women do,
.and holding “men’s fashion shows.”
Barney Ross, who's hardly a sissy—as he was both lightweight and welterweight champion—happened to be in Toots Shor's the other day fetchingly bedecked in a shirt of delicately frothy texture. . “What's that made of?” I asked. “Brocade,” he confessed, shamelessly. “See, it's monogrammed. I also have my shorts monogrammed.” Not one to hide his shorts under a bushel, Barney dug down inte his pants and hauled ‘out a hunk ‘of his ‘stép-ins and displayed the monoam—which was a Tick technicolor red. oo < oo COMEDIAN Jackie Gleason flounced in just then in a cashmere trenchcoat. It was warm inside, but when you pay $350 for a trenchcoat, you keep it on and perspire. Jackie did. “I love ‘your shirt,” Jackie twittered to Barney. “I had to give up my monogrammed socks.” “My socks cost $7.50 and they're good enough,” Barney said. “My trouble,” replied Gleason,” was that I got them on wrong side out. So the monogram instead of J. G. Everybody thought I was either . George Jessel or Gloria Jean.” These two he-men were serious. It's part of the Hollywood and New York trend. I hear that Comedian Jerry Lewis. recently bought 60 pairs of slacks at $80 a pair in Los Angeles—$4800 worth. Billy Eckstine has cashmere jackets for his golf clubs,
d BN “TAPESTRY VESTS”-—which revive the Sir Walter Raleigh days—have been introduced by Jack Romm at the Clyde Shop. Also cobra-skin ties, and cashmere shirts with sterling silver buttons at only $75. One school holds that plain matching vests are just dead now. “Cuffless trousers” are being brought back by tailor Cye-Martin—which means that I may now be able to wear some of the pants I got during the cuffless days of World War IIL Tailor Irving Heller has majernity suits for men-=they “let out” for men who get fatter. But the touch that I, as a boy from the farm, can’t”get used to is this: Gold collar tabs for “the man who has everything.” Furthermore, this man is the ultimate in sophistication, for he wears gold under his collar where nobody can see it.
Americana By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Jan. 30—A lady.acquaintance by the improbable name of Miss Little Eagle has just swooped in, looking as if she had been convicted of collaboration with the enemy—or, at pest, had stumbled into the hands-of a-student barber suffering from the nervous twitch. Miss Little Eagle, an ordi-
narily handsome female if you _s~ ’ BL ” Jike Indians, ran her hands — - through. the prickly stubble of - _ vee her quondam crowning glory _- - ow a. and announced proudly: “How Zz "
do you like, my new airedale cut” “I"thought js was. a poodle cut’ these days,” “sezzi. “No, sez she, “this is newer still. An
airedale cut is shorter than a poodle cut. What do you think «ie of 1t7”
—— ood : “IT IS RAVISSANT, not to mention tres chic,” sezzi, waiting for a bolt of lightning to strike me dead. “It has a certain je ne sais quoi thdt should make you irresistible to any airedale you might happen to meet. If you look like anything at all it is possibly Mr. Garry Moore, the actor fellow, who has been chopping off his locks that way ever since he suffered from debilitating dandruff as a small child.” So BH oh #1 AM FOND of Mr. Moore,” says she, “but I do not think he is beautiful.” “That,” sezzi, jis more or less what I had in mind.” This seemed to affront Miss Little Eagle whose ancestors once scalped mine, for which sin of overexuberance the Oklahoma lady has done gone and scalped herself, in company with a few hundred thousand other female devotees of high style. I reckon the priestesses of this new coiffure cult must be paying penance of a sort, for certainly no lady in her normal state of self-esteem would allow such wanton destruction of her locks as is exemplified by the current vogue in distaff Haircuts. If you have not yet seen these atrocities at close hand, They are accomplished by running the clippers over the female skull, leaving an! inch’ or so of bristle. This is confined into tight little peppercorns of curls or else is allowed to stick up like a Comanche’s topknot. . In either eventuality it is hard to tell that. you
dale, yes, Or maybe even Jerry Lewis. But nof *
: oi. oH 1 KNOW that some savage ladies painstakingly shave their scalps with old paring knives or slivers of glass, but this is not done so much to enhance the beauty of “their knotty little skulls as discourage a prevalence of assorted wild life. e modern American, 6 Miss can claim no such practicality in her deliberate defacement of her
* tresses, not unless she publicly -admits to the’
Ls Sty for fun, lice. She is
is just making herself If 1 were a mafryin’ man, I do Bul sthomis
BrCl Tule seo 8 £
n ouse Desi ners Finally Get Going
emy of Art, Bloomington Hills, Mich. Mr. Jacob also designed No. 190, the winning désign which will be built as the centerpiece of the 27th Indianapolis Home Show, Apr. 158 through the 27th. No. 195 -departs breathlessly from the dreamy whité cottage with the morning glories and garage in the back. Mr. Jacob uses a lot of glass. In certain sections of ‘the counfry where the weatherman -acéts civilized, you could plan-an using half of the lawn as part of the home. A modern porch roof covers what isn't a porch. What- could be sweeter?
* *. Dd oe
of HIS WINNING design can he empared simply to a cheesehox if you want to be brutal, It's low, flat and, if viewed from an airplane, uninteresting, With the feet on the ground and an eve on the arrangement and future upkeep, man, it's a hunk of blueprint house that is screaming to be built, : It's a garage-in-the-front home with part of the property enclosed by a high fence, pickets of w¥ich are spaced in such a way that you have a whisper of privacy without blackout, and enough lawn showing to give the owner a feeling of wide open spaces. He insists on making the outdoors: part of the house. Prof. H. A. Vetter, Department of Architecture, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa., arranged his rectangles in such a way that the garage is out in front and it hooks on to both ends of the home which is shaped like a square C. By so-doing. Prof: Vetter has a patio on three sides of home. Beautiful privacy. Of course, there is still plenty of grass and shrubbery around the house and garage. > a 1 HEARD one man remark that designers are finally “hitting their stride.” Look what progress the automotive industry has made in 50 years. The car today is a far cry from the bag of nuts and bolts of yesterday. We've been building homes arslot longer than we have cars. What was hanging on exhibition didn't surprise me. What is surprising is that we haven't arrived at this exhilarating point sooner.
Men Talk Clot hes Ww ‘orse Than Dames
“It just makes me feel good,” one of them explained to me, “to know that I have a solid
' 14-karat neck.”
*, *, o> Sn
THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Faye Emerson and Denise Darcel both gave up their poodle haircuts. .. . . Judy Garland’'s beloved, Sid Luft, went to L.A. intent on arranging Judy's movie comeback, Russell Nype and a certain gal are serious. But he won't tell anybody who tis. . . . Yolande Donlan, an ex-' ‘Billie Dawn,” ig Doug Fair-
banks’ leading lady in “Mister Drake’s Duck.” . ... Ted Williams and singer Madelaine
Chambers are a midnitem. Happy Chinesé New Year, . U. 8. Atty. Myles Lane has studiously avoided speaking—even saying ‘“Hello"—to Frank” Costello throughout the contempt proceedings , , . He even avoids his glance. . .. cial Vivi Stokes (Mrs. Marco Crespi) is expecting. ? ' = A big B'wayite whose income taxes are under scrutiny by Wash'n. is accused of hiding $1000 bills in books in his library in an effort ‘to conceal his income. . . . Photogs have a new beef against Gorgeous
Miss Donlan Grover Whalen: that he walked in their way at the Churchill departure. . . . Elizabeth Firestone spurned Bull-
fighter Mario Cabre in Spain as Ava Gardner did.
Jockey Conn McCreary’s son John, whose eye was injured by an exploding pop bottle, will retain 25 per cent vision. . “Who's that cute gal?” Humphrey Bogart asked in a Hollywood restaurant. “Peggy Rabe, the gal you had a battle with over a panda,” said somebody. And so they met—formally, and made up.
* + 4
TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: “Once models showed the styles; now styles show the models.” —Charley Jones. : < oF oe
EARL’'S PEARLS . . . Mae West said it: “There are two kinds of girls: Those who neck and bridesmaids.” “Now they've made cigarets less irritating,” says Snag Werris, “I wish they'd start working on the commercials.” . . . That's Earl, brother.
That Poodle Haircut Leaves Him Cold
Prussian officer. All they need today is a few saber scars and a straight neck to be a ringer for Eric Von Stroheim got up in his aunt's old clothes. With the new, chic poodle cut, a man successfully resists the urge to bury his face in the glossy head foilage of his beloved. Might as well stick your kisser in a sandspur patch. * ob NOBODY has successfully explained why women, and especially American women, do these horrid things to themselves, unless something weighs heavily on their consciences for which they wish to atone. Maybe they are atoning for the old new look, which drove so many males into permanent bachelorhood. Or maybe that it is just a mass madness, result of restless discontent, which perennially afflicts the female, causing her to do outlandish things to herself out of progressive pique. oo oo & THERE is not very much to rearrange on the average female chassis, without running into expensive plastic surgery or at least a radical corsetiere, and so they fiddle with hair styles and paint their eyelids green and their fingernails black. = Whatever it Is, it gains them few male customers at the box office of eventual matrimony, which I helieve to be the major compromise of the conflict between the sexes. A semi-scalped female may be all right in a side show, but she would scare hell out of you on the pillow across the way. Go ahead, girls, keep monkeying with your natural resources and you'll wind up talking te yourselves, because the cat and the canary that go hand-in-hand with spinsterhed won't be listening. either.
Dishing the Dirt _ By Marguerite Smith
Q—1I have a problem flower bed in my back yard. It is on the south side of the yard but my neighbors have large bushes (almost trees) that shade the bed all summer so it gets no sun. I have’ tried all kinds of flowers and they won't bloom. Is there anything I can do about such a gituation. I do want some color there. Do not use my name, I like my neighbors but not-their bushes. A-—I'm afraid a lot of neighbors may see their
‘shrubs in this question, . So I won't even use an are looking at a woman. A poodle, yés. An aire-
Read Marguerite Smith's Garden 4 Column . _in The Sunday Times
initial, But I think your problem can be solved rather easily and still not stir up the neighborhood. It’s largely a mechanical one. For you're probably ‘getting into more difficulty from the shrubs’ roots than from the lack of sun. Couldn't
you adopt the newer method with yéur flower bed ° ‘and make it a panel bed rather than a border?
‘Move I out three or more. feet from the shrub hedge. Use a ground cover between it and the ‘Wild violets and ajuga (blue bugle) thrive
of that
= on
So-
shrubs. Then your roblegs. ‘becomes one
dianapolis Times
0 : - ol” =
By WILLIAM H. RUDY
Times Special Writer
THE STORY goes that in May, 1857,
in the ship
chandler shops and the public houses of Plymouth, England, the master of the windjammer Duncan Dunbar was
boasting: “I'll anchor in hell or Sydney in 60 days.
Time may have added something to whatever the skipper said, but it is very likely that he said something along that line. Those were the days when Britain's _ shipbuilders were seeking the answer’ to the clipper ships. The answer was a very close copy of the Yankee's clipper. Competition with the New Englanders had made zea c¢aptains the world over speed conscious, a 8 8 : THE Duncan Dunbar, 1980 tons, was the biggest ship ever built in the Sunderland yards. She was built becauséher canny Scot owner, Duncan Dunbar, sensed a pressing need for a ship specially built for the Australia run. Gold had been -discovered there. The maritime world was not only speed conscious. It was gold conscious, too, for this was but a few years after the Sutter's Mill discovery in California. . The Australian gold boom wasn't much, but Duncan Dunbar—the owner, not the ship— was one to find profits where he could. He was a lucky man. Says his biographer: ‘‘Fortunately for him, no less than for other owners, the Crimean War followed closely after the Australian Zola boom,
THE war over. Mr. Dunbar, more fortunate than memnibers of the Light Brigade, returned his graceful windjammer to the run Down Under. On the quay at Plymouth that early summer of 1857 she was loading a precious cargo. Only the more exceptional items traveled by clipper ship, and the Dunbar's
STALIN'S ‘MEIN KAMPF’
‘The Road To
By DAVID SNELL Seripps-Howard Staff Writer
COMMUNIST revolutions are in progress throughout Asia and the Middle East. They are moving stealthiiy toward comple-
tion, with littlehindrance from®-
the West. Wherever the non-Commu-nist world touches that of the Communists on a land boundary, the struggle is in a crucial stage. Communism is spreading like wet ink on a blotter. Many years ago, Joséph Stalin wrote: “When a life-and- death struggle is being“ waged and is spreading between proletarian Russia and the imperialist entente, only two alternatives confront the border regions. n » ” “EITHER they join forces with. Russia . . . or they join forces with the entente., , , There is no third solution.” You can find that passage in Stalin’s unexpurgated ‘‘Marxism and the National and Co1onial Question,” wherein he exposed the plan of conquest that has enslaved 600 million persons in only five years. Published in 1927, the book is today the Bible and blueprint of Soviet foreign policy. It reveals indetail the procedures hy which Russia - exports revolu-
“tionito the colonial and depend-
ent borderlands, It tells how Stalin hopes to topple those bor-
derlands like a row of dominoes.
” » » SNEERINGLY confident that the West would never comprewend until too late, Stalin gave away this vital trade secret: “What is the fundamental nosition from which Comintern and Communist parties- generally. approach problems of the revolutionary movement in codonial and dependent countries?
1 “It 1s a strict differentiation
between revolution in imperial-
‘ ist countries, countries that op-
press other peoples, and revo-
lutions in colonial and depend-
ent countries, countries ‘that suffer from the imperialist oppression of other states. “The fundamental mistake of the opposition is that they do
not understand and will not -
admit this difference between one type of revolution and the ~ other ipo of revolution.” i
1
manifest listed cargo valued at 72,000 pounds sterling. Aboard her the day she sailed came 63 passengers, most of them women and young girls. The Duncan Dunbar was as
comfortable as sailing - ships came in those days, and her passengers included wives following their husbands to the colony, and brides and brides-to-be. So it 1s possible that the
master made some such boast as “Hell or Sydney in 60 days,” for he had a good ship, an impatient passenger list and a capable crew. The ship's con=>r pany numbered 59 officers and men, a sizable number by clip-
per standards, and in the words
of the time, they had ‘rope varn for hair and Stockholm tar for blood.”
” n ” SOMETIMES the a long time, patiently or impatiently, for its prey. It toyed 12 days recently with the Flying Enterprise. The sea waited 81 days for the Duncan Dunbar, and it, too, almost made port. The Duncan Dunbar weighed anchor in Plymouth harbor on May 31. New sails aloft on her three masts, she headed into the Bay of Biscay and south for the long voyage around the Cape of Good Hope intp the Indian Ocean. With all canvas spread the Duncan Dunbar sped through the roaring forties. In the doldrums the new sails came down to be replaced by an old suit that the incessant flapping would not harm. ss SOMEWHERE in the Indian Ocean the ‘skipper must have
sea waits
No.
Victory Over The West’
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1952
Rel
Editor's Note: The sea is the most powerful forcés on earth. But every now and then the men who .go to the sea forget it, and the sea has to remind them. Capt. Henrik Kurt Carlsen's ‘heroic battle recalls other sagas * in which man has matched his wits with the sea and lost In a second of a series, William H. Rudy today relates the tragic voyage of the Duncan Dunbar,
realized that he had talked a little too hig when he spoke of 60 days. and half of August before the clipper bow cut along the coast of eastern Australia. It was sunset on Aug. 20, clear but squally, with a fresh easterly off the Tasman Sea, when the good ship raised the
wsoblue” bluffs of Sydney Heads guaraing Botany Bay, as the beautiful harbor was called.
From the masthead came the cry of “Land ho!” from a lookout anxious to win the bottle of grog that went with this discovery. The easterly breeze was a “port-making” breeze and the crew must have pictured immediately a first night ashore and the passengers must have dressed in their best, their sea chests packed. There was nothing, apparently, to prevent the Duncan Dunbar from running square between North Head Light, clearly visible, and South Head to the’ protection of the harbor, where a pilot was waiting to take her to the dock. ” ” ” THERE was no wireless, of course, and Sydney could know only that the Dunbar was on her way. She was a favorite there and her earlier arrivals had been days of public rejoicing. Links with the mother country were fragile, and this ship brought wives and sweethearts:
2 4
June and July went hy
Then something: happened that can be explained only by the awe of oldtime windjammer masters for the dreaded coasts. With daylight ‘still lingering, the captain ordered sail shortened and set a northeast by north course, The word was passed the ship would stand off the harbor until morning. ‘That night there was a celebration below decks, The captain broke out his best Madeira to toast his victory over four of the seven seas, » o ” ABOVE, the east wind stiffened to a gale and as the mast trucks swung in great arcs against the sky, the order was
given to shorten sail again to
reduce the pitching. Still thinking of the pleasures of Sydney, the crew was in the vards singing the chant that
went with ‘reefing sail: “Oh away-ay-ay-oh, and we'll pay Paddy Doyle for his boots.” At eight bells the watch
changed and though a galeborne rain was beating down,
Sydney Head light still was visible. All was well. . No one ever was to know
what motivated his decision, but a seaman recalled that the captain came on deck and ordered sail aloft for a belated run into the harbor. A historian who reconstructed the scene, Frank H. Shaw, was to wonder (if somepne below had questioned his courage, or if he suddenly feared the gale would increase and endanger the ship in the open sea. ” n ” . ANOTHER hand was sent to the wheel to help the helmsman hold the ship into the seas. Extra lookouts were posted. Aboard the Duncan Dunbar was an able seaman named Johnstone, a veteran who twice had been the only survivor of a wreck. Johnstone remembered that suddenly, as the clipper plunged for the harbor en-
YALTA—How much wight did Alger Hiss' words have on the China question when Churchill,
Roosevelt and Stalin met,
In ‘other words, rules applies in countries like the Britain. Another set holds for the Asiatic and Middle Eastern countries that now are Stalin's primary target. Stalin emphasized that what-
ever the type, mo Communist
* revolution just happens. A rev-
olution is like ‘a house. You cannot buil@ the roof before the foundation and supporting walls are. installed. And this is important: Laying-the foundation is just as vitai—and just as
_much.a part of the revolution—
as nailing on the shingles.
Incidentally, it is ‘interesting . to note that while Stalin claims
to have destiny in his corner”
and credits his victories to the logic of history, hie urges Com-
munists everywhere to lend desYay. and history a hand
one set of
United States and Great
0
EDITOR'S NOTE: As Hitler revealed in “Mein: Kampf” his blueprint for conquest, Joseph Stalin revealed in his unexpurgated “Marxism and the National and Colonial Question” his plan for the defeat of the West and the establishment of world communism. In this series of articles, reporter David Snell
analyzes the foreign policy of .
the Soviet Union in the light of Stalin's own writings. Little known in the United States, Stalin's “Marxism and the National and Colo-
~ nial. Question” was brought
to the attention of the Scripps-Howard . Newspapers: hy Alice Widener: of New York as’ a public sefvice. . Also, Stalin does not rely “entirely o nial-style revolution and its ap
- wrote,
colonies,
= This
plication by native Communists in the lands for which it was designed. He counts on his pals in the United States to help. “No lasting victory can be achieved in colonial and dependent countries, Stalin “unless a real bond is established between. the movement for emancipation in these countries and the proletarian movement in the advanced countries of the West.” The “Programme of ‘the Communist International” adds this: “The tasks of the Communist International connected with the revolutionary struggle in
pendencies are extremely important strategical tasks in the world proletarian struggle... .-. (vietory) cannot, be achieved unless the closest cooperation f& maintained. be
on the format for colo-. tween the proletariat in the op-
presemg countries. the or
‘semicolonies and de-
trance, the North Head light was ohscured. A few minutes later came the cry from the bow: “Breakers ahead!” The ship was put hard about, but it was too late. The easterly gale had combined with a landward current to carry the Dunbar nearer the sheer rocks than the master
had thought. ” ” »
INTO THE cliff drove the clipper bow. The ship recoiled, then plunged again into the rocks. Split wide open, she plunged to the bottom. The passengers below had no time to rush on deck. Those on deck were carried by a wall of water (nto the swirling sea, Even the masts and sails were carried down and only loose deck gear floated free. Tangled in the cordage was Seaman Johnstone, the man the sea did not want. A swell higher than the rest pitched him on to a narrow ledge in the perpen-
‘dicular rock.
n » ” DEBRIS was sighted the next day. Search parties were formed. They found little on the sea but pieces of bodies, for there were tiger sharks about. Lying on the ledge, nearly dead, was Johnstone, ‘He could be reached only by a man lowered by ropes down the sheer cliff, It was Johnstone, again the sole survivor, who told the story.
Forty years later Mark Twain visited Sydney on his world tour. He heard the story of the master's voyage to Sydney or Hell and he wrote: “The tale is told to every stranger that passes the spot, and it will continue to be told to all that come, for generations; but it will never grow old, custom cannot stale it, the heartbreak that is in it cannot perish out of it.” NEXT—Two
years in the
_ grip of the Arctic Seas.
ing masses countries. “The Communist parties in the imperialist countries must render systematic aid to the, colonial revolutionary movement , . , by all means in their — power.”
in the oppressed
2 u »
THIS WAS Stalin's quaint, Aesopian way of saying that Communists the world over must work as a.team. The sine ister meaning of this was dem« onstrated at Yalta, where Pres ident Roosevelt presumably received advice on China from Alger Hiss,
It is unlikely that the world will ever learn precisely what Hiss told President Roosevelt —unless Hiss himself decides to disclose it. But of this one can be sure:
Hiss did not tell President Roosevelt something every Communist knows very well: A quarter of a century ago, Stalin designated Asia apd the Mid« dle East as “the road to vice tory over the West.”
u 2 o
TODAY communism Ils marching that road. : the victory of the (world) proletarian revolution” writes the Russian theoretician E. A. Dunayeva in a current party pamphlet “is impossible without the support of the op« pressed and exploited peoples of the colonies . . . “After World War II the na-tional-colonial’ problem became exceptionally Importam and acute . “The "Soviet solution of the .’problem is no sécret.” No secret? > : oa » ” JIN ANTICIPATION of a direct military attack through the front door of Europe, the West is in frenzied defensive preparation. But the rear door——in Asia and the Middle East — is open and unguardéd. . . No. secret? . i
The West has yet to under. stand fully that Stalin is build. * ing revolutions behind its baek, or that Stalin is fighting——and | winning—a creeping war,
No secret?
The West is trying to “cone... i “tain” communism-—without any es 4
clear idea of. what tt is lying to contain.
SP Crosping war:
