Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1952 — Page 2
PAGE --
June Goal Fixed at 3.7 Million
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (UP)| «Defense officials said yesterday that draft calls this summer and: fall will have to be big enough to provide “substantial” replacements for drafted men and Na-| tional Guardsmen released from! active duty, ile refusing to make any ad‘vante predictions, they indicated that draft calls probably will have to be increased sharply over recent levels by late summer or parly fall barring an unexpected spurt in volunteers and re-enlist-mefits, The April draft call for 20,000 men was the smallest since last Jume and 9000 below March inductions, The March call itself was 50 per cent below February. Cite Several Factors Officials said the 20,000 men] In April will givé the armed servIces all the men they need to meet manpower goals through June 30,-1952, the e nd of this fiscal year. The goal for June 30, is 8,700,000 men. There are several factors which make it probable that draft calls
year. the Korean truce talks drag on and there is no break in the war Replacements will have to be found for drafted men, and Na tional - Guardsmen inducted two years ago afid whose maximum term of service i= up. The first post-Korean drafted; men reported for service in September. 1950. Some 50,000 of them were inducted that month) pRINCETON, N. J., Feb, 25 and another 50,000 in October. In p wateh-size radio, without batNovember inductions totaled 70.- tarjos and powered by heat from
detained for observation.
Ry Science Service ax
SURVIVES SIX-STORY FALL—Safe after six-story fall from a
will increase sharply later this Brooklyn ‘apartment house window, Roberta Renny, 3, relaxes with except for convention delegates
Watch-Size Radio Runs By Human Body Heat
t
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___ aa
‘Sharp Gain Due In Draft Calls
vw
LL MONDAY, FEB. 25,1952
Summer, Fall
————————————————————
a Expect Score
For Office
By NOBLE REED are expected to file fo~ lature, congress, and ‘county Brown Leland
and Secretary of Smith tomorrow,
at 8 a. m, official ‘start of 1952 election campaign which litical leaders are predicting
To File Here
More than a score of candidates the legis-
of +!
fices with County Clerk H., Dale State
id Filings will begin in both offices
the powill,
be the “hottest” in 20 years. | Candidates for legislative and judicial offices must file with the Secretary of State, others with the county clerk. | Those who must file at the Statehouse include candidates for ithe legislature, Congress, juvenile court judge and prosecutor, | | Candidates for county treasurer, —eoroner, survevor, county, commissioner, delegates to the! state nominating conventions and| precinct committeemen must file {with the county clerk. Deadlines Set i Deadline for entering races for)
party
This is particularly true if p,.co Mary Jane Weir, at a New York hospital. Roberta is being who will have until Apr. 6.
Sharpest develop
factional fights among candidates
{for U, 8. Senator, Governor
party convention seats since those elected will vote on candidates|
nominations in the May 6] primary balloting will be Mar.
ari
will | for|
and,
{other<state offices at conventions
of both parties next summer. Campaigns of half a prospective. candidates for the
ube in that it has no heated fila- publican
dozen
Re-
nomination for Govern-
ment operating in a vacuum. It is or and those seeking the Demo-
within the tiny
speck of germa- cratic neminations for U.
S. Sena-
nium that the electrons are tor and Governor will center 000 and December Jo000. 18 the human hody was foreseen, oot to do the work they around the convention delegates. each of the following here as a results of the develop- normally do in the vacuum of at —————
ment of transistors. Transistors are the powerful found midget devices revolutionizing the
months, 80,000 men were taken,
Seek Replacements Replacements must be for these men as well as for regu-|electronics industry. lars whose enlistments are expir-|[rugged as well as tiny, they a 08: eink of the 28th, 40th. 43d, (tions, many of them secret. and 45th National Guard divisions] The transistor consists also will start coming home from tiny speck the active service next month, about four months ahead of schedule. The divisions*will be kept in serv-| ice and the guardsmeén replaced with drafted men and volunteers. | There are about 35,000 men in the four divisions from California, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Rhode Island and Connect-
of
of rare
a paper clip.
lusually will do it more efficiently. And it will do many jobs that the tubes cannot do. | Foreseen by Radio Corporation of America scientists through the improvement of transistors, now
ii The Army 2ise sant little more than three years old, . jare: com t. rtable electroni guardsmen in South Dakota's ompacL. yoria 8 ae ronie,
computers; a vest-pocket personal
196th and Tennessee's 278th regi- .. 4, with many of the features,
‘ mental combat teams.
. ’ of present -day models, While the backbone of the | vould Yun months or one set of sald today. guard outfits was formed by men batteries: a transmitter-recetver National from their home states, their
t § ranks were filled out by drafted {that can be smaller than a tele-
! : ¢ . phone -hand-set and special, men and volunteers from across n,.i mfjjtary electronic equipmen the country.
ib ———— ! Resist Shock
Main advantages of the tranGreensburg Mayor
|sistors are their small size, re- . {sistance to shock and low power Serious After Stroke P ‘GREENSBURG, Feb.
com-
needs. The latest
Indiana's youngest municipal | |what the signal in a modern telechiefs at 35, was in serious condi- {phone takes. Amplification of this tion today from a paralytic hip signal by a tube uses a full stroke. att, about one million times Mr. Smith. former state chair- more than the amount required. man of the Young Republican or-| The transistor differs basically ganization, was stricken late Sat-| from the conventional electron urday in his honfe. He was un-j able to talk for hours but re-| gained his speech vesterday. The stroke left him partly Paralyzed) on his left side, however.
Le 6 Neier $3 5
Mr. Smith, an attorney, held a AN a national young Republican office WE \N\ 2 in 1949-50, the year he headed the CE Ne | GOP youth in Indiana. [AT = r= ree CE7t ado INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC | TN. CIOS CASUALTIES fF or (55 Days) ov \3 EY 1951 1952 ' hs Accidents ..... 1162 1047 Maybe we shouldn't complain, Injured ....... 463 492 | but in the chorus it's the best _ Killed rrasases 9 9 | kicker who gets the most dough.
Gl's Curiosity Puts TWA in a Hole es
By“ United Press happening before,” Mr. PITTSBURGH, Feb. 25—A CU- gaid. “The plane was about 12
rious soldier's desire to find out minutes out of Pittsburgh at the which holds one’ less passenger how an emergency door works in {ime and this soldier was sitting than a Martin- 202-A, All of a sudden only
flight gave Trans-Warld Airlines i, a rear seat. officials“a problem today. everyone felt a strong draft.” “Right now we have one more, As. passengers scrambled for plane here than we have emer- papers and other effects, Capt. gency doors,” IL. F. Koster, dis- George Shank, the pilot, inspected trict TWA: manager said. the gaping hole in the side of Mr. Koster said the soldier,/the &hip and ordered the plane known only as “Cpl. Cunning- back to Pittsburgh,
ham,” satisfied his curiosity by A passenger said the corporal hurtling the door into space Sat- had been reading a sign on the urday night as a Martin 202-A|/door near his elbow. The sign plane was flying to Chicago with/said: “Pull handle in case of, 22 passengers ahofird. emergency.” The door fell 6000 feet td a spot. “He seemed kind of. curious
near Burgettstown, Pa.
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already finding military applica- every germanium. Its cost is about half a that of gold, $100 metal pound. Each transistor needs such \germanium embedded in a piece a tiny fleck of germanium, howof plastic about half the size of ever, It will do much of js small compared to the cost of the work of electron tubes but. making the device.
he electron tube. As used in transistors,
impurity for 10 million parts of pure
Plot Hinted In Austria
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 The United States, Britain France are watching
to $200 per
that the cost of the material
1 |
(UP)
andi
increasing and ominous signs that Russia is {cooking up new troubles in Aus-
Korea Blood ‘Doncitions tria, diplomatic -authorities reported yesterday. Reach 4 Million Pints Experts noted that Moscow's Communist Party newspaper, WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (UP) Pravda, has alleged that the West -Americans have donated 4 mil- is planning to split Austria by]
Junction tran-|4.ranqe 25 (UP) /sistor can be operated on about Only
—Mayor Sheldon Smith, one of 2 millionth of a watt, just about ing the first seven months.
i
{to chop $2 billion from Germany's !debt to the United States.
{ultimate tax burden of American not
{$2 billion.”
{scheduled to open in London next “I
Koster it worked,”
spare emergency ‘doors available,
about the handle, and said some-!fore, no one ever thought of keepT don’t recall anything like it | thing about testing it to. See how | ing a spare, N he said.
me
lio on pints of blood for military writing a separate peace treaty.'ar
and civilian use since the start of State Department officials
© The Soviet charge, however, President E. Roland peen coupled with Harriman said in a special report scenes
said
which | the Korean War, the Red Cross this charge was ‘sheer nonsense.’
has
behind-the- tance call to Denver Red efforts to discredit Platt's home as the stately notes loudspeaker in the Platt living
—_— J
«
LONG DISTANCE—Pfc. Willis R. Platt Jr. kisses his bride, Marilyn Vorkes as the Rev. Fred W. Campbell, who officiated, holds phone through which father's voice was heard.
Gives Daughter ‘Away me zo NOW Russian In Long Distance Rite
Tough and manium is go pure that it conre tains only one part
MILFORD. Conn., Feb. 25 (UP)
Telephone A father 1700 miles away gave Mahoney described the bride and Union soon must rule whether a his daughter in marriage by long- the seiting to her parents over a peanut remains a nut or becomes
technician
)
Off Beans
Robert
distance telephone Saturday night conventional French phone.
and heard her say ‘I do,” in a 30-minute ceremony costing $1.17 a minute in telephone tolls. Because Pfc. Willis R. Platt was unable to get a long enough leav {from the Air Force to go to his
Rev.
Ww.
The bride walked alone and joined Pfc. Platt in front of The Fred Campbell, a gregationalist minister. As he spoke, Mr. Mahoney held
a con-
\bride’s home in Denver, Colo., for the telephone mouthpiece in front
the nuptials, they were married in'of him, and when he said, ‘piped gives this woman in matrimony?
words came over the speaker at the Vorhes home in home here Denver.
his home with her parents * in by telephone. Technicians had to set up loudspeakers at Mr. Platt’s wl at the Denver home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs, + W. Vorhes. They put
his
The
from Mr.
on: the blood program that Red and force from office Austria's of the bridal march blared from room.
blood can now reach 70 per cent Karl Gruber. of the nation's population. His report indicated, however they create tension. that collections will fall short of
Fhese efforts
t Cross facilities for collecting western-oriented foreign minister, a phonograph. Blonde Marilyn Vorhes, solemn- exchanged not expected to succeed although ly stepped down the stairs of Mr. honey
are’
A large part of the uneasiness capa)
the- quota of 2,8 million pints for nf the West -traces to the activi-
1,195,211 were collected dur- 1.t. Gen. V. P. high commissioner who engineered the coup d'etat in Hungary.
regarded 4 as a trouble-maker.
Sviridov,
1947
Senator Opposes Slash
In Germany's Debt WASHINGTON, Feb. 25
(UP)
[protested to the State Department
{yesterday over its reported plan CHICAGO
, Feb. 25
that In a letter to Acting Secretary of State James E. Webb, he said Major surgery. the plan would amount to a de-
for the current fiscal year. ties in Soviet-occupied Austria of Russian to, Austria,
Red
He is’
Urges * ‘Major. Surgery’ "—Sen. Guy M. Gillette (D. Ia.) In Chicago Scandals
(UP)—Gov. rAdlai E. Stevenson said yesterday the recent -politico-gangster ‘scandals in Chicago call for “some
He said the infiltration of un-
partment decision to “increase the desirable elements into politics is
new, but that it oalls citizens by the enormous stim of action on many fronts. The most important,
Gov, Sen. ment
Gillette urged the depart- enson said, is a td reconsider its action opinion,
for
Stevsustained public not just a passing flurry
quickly because the international of indignation, but a continuous conference on Germany's debts iz crusade.”
hope Chicago's civie science and self-respect. will -taroused this time,” he said.
Thursday.
constay
His remarks in a speech tn a
of Columbus
meeting
were. prompted by the murder of
a Republican ward leader the passsenger said,
Mr. Koster said that a DC-3
scandal.
Safety Drive Wins
plane. available to resume r + the flight to Chicago, and tHe cor- STON {UP) poral was elected to await the __.. next flight. “He didn't object at all,” Mr. Koster said. “But when his flight was ready an hour -later, we couldn't find Cpl. Cunningham
was the
dents in Massachusetts
in 1951.
here
and a subsequent county payroll
-— Massachuhighway safety program is paying off. The number of school children killed in highway acci-
has
dropped from 134 in 1931 to 16
anywhere, Maybe he decided to . take a bus.” Mr. Koster said the 202-A was grounded because there were no
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bride's R. through their own telephone: the. parents, through a long dis- mony.” Tha words sounded through the
the
parents
give her’ in
their vows,
(Platt's home wearing a gown of piece to their lips.
pink lace and carrying a corsage of White orchids.
©
Ss
-: ue v Reg.
"After the ceremony, weds talked to the Vorhes.
Sorry, No Phone or Mail Orders
TOMORROW ONLY!
tw
the
All Items Subject to ror pling
“who
loud-
called
“We matri-
bride and bridegroom Mr. held the telephone mouth-
Ma-
newly-
is pending.
Ayes & Go. —
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“.
House Bans Telecasts § Of Red Probe
5 By United Press WASHINGTON, Feh. 25 House Speaker Sam Rayburn dis- # |closed today he has banned tele. [vision and radio broadcasts of
—
’ {hearings before House commit=. (tees. : | He made the announcement when asked about Detroit re-
‘ports that a proposed TV broad. cast of an Un-American Active ities Committee hearing there had been blocked on his orders. “That's exactly correct,” Mr, Rayburn replied. “There is. no Irule of the House permitting tele{vising of House proceedings. That applies to the committees.” Asked if the broadcast ban applies also to radio, Mr. Rayburn said it does,
Squabble Blocks Probe Opening
DETROIT, Feb. 25. (UP)—A squabble over whether hearings of the House Un-American Activities Committee should be televised today delayed the start of the comimittee’'s investigation of alleged {Communist infiltration into Michi« gan's $3 billion defense industry, | The committee was to start its week-long hearings at 10 a. m. (Indianapolis Time), but Chief Council Frank Tavenner said members voted to delay calling witnesses until later. Although Mr. Tavenner would say only that the committee “found it inconvenient” to start as scheduled. it was helieved a deadlock over-.televising the hearings had developed amohg the four committee members present, Investigator Don Appel admitted that television was “a main factor” .in the delay. After an executive session Rep. Charles Potter (R. Mich.) said members referred the question back to the ment of shelled peanuts delivered youse in Washington for deciby the Dnepropetrovsk Railroad gion. to an oil factory at the regular| petroit's threé television - stafreight rate for nuts. tions had equipment at the fedAfter delivery, the railroad de- ora] building when Rep. John S. cided that once the shell has been wood (D. Ga.), chairman of the removed, a peanut becomes a nut committee, announced that the kernel or a bean. hearings would not be televised. |” The small courtroom was packed with about 75 spectators and some. 20 newsmen and pho-
Nuts Drive Red Lawyers
(UP)—The the Soviet
MOSCOW, Feb. 24 Supreme Court of
a bean when the shell is removed The dispute arose "over a ship-
IT SENT the factory an addi-
tion bill based on the higher tographers. There was no evifreight rate for shipments of dence of any courtroom demonbeans,
strations by leftist organizations. The factory refused to pay the er ———————————
additional charge. It was backed up by the Food and Industries Ministry, while the Ministry of Railroads supported the railway. Litigation dragged through the people's and distriet courts to the Ukrainian Supreme Court and finally to the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union, where an appeal
‘Microscope Still Good BOSTON (UP) —Dr, Anna Quincy Churchill, 63, ton’s most distinguished students of minute animal tissue and a member of the Tufts Medical School staff since 1918, is 3till using the same, Inierozoope she bought in 1907.
1872-1952
on
«
one of Bos-
/ MOND
Al
E PANMU 25—The | fered toda nominatio truce super nists withd Under th promise p would com the previou nations. The two would be I vakia. The nominated land.
Chinese ( that the A cation” to clusion on did not flat United 1! Darrow sug reconsider as a means deadlock fi on Russia's the ‘“neutra
“It is ob to delay th do not acce Darrow sa. interpreted that you dc to the neut
Meanwhil tailed both ity along War front
PSC '51 F Figu
Sales of $4.74 milli income of Service Co. to $832 0» nounced. After de preferred s equivalent the 3,573,9¢ stock ‘outs 1951. This share ear 2,846,643 sh In the mailed to R. A. Galla that the co rect taxat levels. The taxes for 1 was equiva of common million mo: visien, > Exp:
Mr. Galla demand fo: made it ne pany to furt tend its « through tk construction years 1952$102 millior The revi: two additior the new W (each 90,00 pacity) and sion, sub-st facilities, a basis of pr required du of the proj riod. The insta the Wabash end of 195 000-kilowat! 90,000-kilow ®be in oper: Decer=ber, December, capacity at estimated s The comp order to fin program, a lion of ad will be requ year constr
Sweden U. S. Fri STOCKH (UP) —, T nounced yes studying a treaty of and naviga countries. A foreig said the pro place the 19 with the U
1
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336 E. Wo 1502 E. W 501 W. W 13 E. 16th
