Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1952 — Page 3
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8, 1052
SATURDAY, MAR. 8, 1052 ren THT INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___. _ ta mnie PAGE .8' d from. the . : : a ; io BI . : tar UN | : — QR : 4 | | er Profile En New FBI Chief Here wou: | UN Says Reds DATELINE: Hollywood [HST Charge Hoosier tro Has Wide Experience tured ma i Have Secret * SEER Ty ema Stirs Anger | HE MIGHT be anything. 4 gel > —r : sales manager, perhaps, or a ess execu-
Of Senators {tive, attorney, or'a thousand and one other things. Je ; (a young man. might strive to be professionally. > k's "| More accurately he‘is a combination of all of © By Un ress them and as a result bears the look of anonymity WASHINGTON, Mar. 8—Chair-| necpssary for any good agent of the Federal man Clyde R. Hoey of’ the Sen-ipyreau of Investigation. : até’'s permanent Investigating 1, is George D. King, new agent in charge of committee said today Presidentine FBI's office here in the federal building. Truman was “utterly mistaken” ‘ar ging took over the job last week, replacwhen he charged that opponents jo Harvey G. Foster, who was transferred to of his plan to shake up the In-|p Paso, Tex, to head the office there.
_ By United Press PANMUNJOM, Mar. 8—United| Nations accused the Communists] today of holding Allied prisoners, including Americans, in prison camps in China and assured the Reds they had “convincing evidence” to prove it. The Redg retaliated with the]
POW Camps | of W ESC. wll
» y . ternal Revenue Bureau put politi- ue threat that if the “lawless activ- cal. patronage ahead of public] Ap §8 Mr. King has seen a lot of service from” : ties ot ne i aan), ane service. - coast-to coast and has’ run the gauntlet of crim- ! , | The North Carolina Demo-| 8 . HALLS ARE } € inal investigation. . Reluctant to talk about the
crat's reaction to Mr, Truman's outstanding cases on which he has worked, the statement was fairly calm. Some agent with the usual understatement of the FBI, of his colleagues called the Pres- says only that he found bank robberysinvestigaident’'s remark “insulting” and tions “very interesting.” “intemperate.” : He drew bank robbery details They said Mr. Truman had in Los Angeles in the early 1040's, hurt «the chances of his program “There seemed to he a bank on every corner, to replace the 64 politically-ap- then, and a robbery almost every week,” he said. pointed tax collectors with 25 Agent King speaks with a slight drawl, somecollectors under civil service. thing he picked up during his four and a half Mr. Truman also was rapped Years in Birmingham, Ala. He was agent in for ordering federal agencies not charge there, too. to give information to a House i $ oo judiciary subcommittee investi-| HE IS A native of Charlottesville, Va., the gating the. Justice Department, (S0n Of a construction engineer. He attended The President wrote Chairman schools on the east coast and was graduated from Frank L. Chelf (D. Ky.) yester- Central High School in Washington, D.C, day that the group was taking | While in the secondary school he played quara “dragnet approach” which|terback on the football team, but today .passes would “seriously interfere” with that off with the statement that “everybody plays
scope of the Korean question.” Maj. Gen. Lee Sang Cho, who! read the ambiguous threat from| a prepared text, did not elaborate] on the “lawless activities.” f oi , Rear Adm. R. E. Libby told Lee| ° in prisoner. discussions that or turned Communist soldiers had! described one prison Harbin, Manchuria. “We have convincing evidence| that you are holding prisoners of] war in detention camps outside] Korea without having reported| them to our side,” Adm. Libby told the North Korean general. ' Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols ® said a captured Chinese lieutenant told of escorting some United Nations troops to a Harbin center
camp in
GEORGE D. KING . . .
sons- have already shown Indications they will follow him into the ranks of the FBI. During the war years Mr. King, as other agents; was assigned to work allied with the na. tional defense, in addition to regular criminal investigations.
he could be anybody.
{foothall when they go to high school. Ib last July. government business. Not even an agent in charge of an FBI bureau It was In 1935 he decided he wanted to be- d There were about 1000 .men in y Job can find a way of escaping the tangle and con« ah ro tay 1000 men 30 Will Complete Jo |come an agent with the FBI. His first job was a (,.cion of moving into a new home. The first day
clerk in the bureau's office in Washington, so he started attending night classes at Columbus University. He was graduated from Columbus in 1937 with complish our original purpose anda bachelor’s degree in law, one of the requirecomplete this job of making anments for an agent. He was admitted to the Dishonest, fair and thorough jnvesti- trict of Columbia Bar and in 1938 he became a gation.” {special agent. oho 3 § would confer oe time," | HE TOOK his training at Quantico, Va,, and and hoped “an amicable and sat-| spent three years on duty in Washington, Mr. isfactory solution can be reached.” King has since served in Kansas City, Louisville, Rep. Byron G. Rogers (D.|Los Angeles, Cincinnati, Birmingham, Knoxville, Colo.), a member of the subcom- and now Indianapolis. mittee, said he didn't “see how, He was agent in charge at Cincinnati, Birmthe limited request would be a/ingham and Knoxville before his Indianapolis sn on the governmentiassignment. DE p § | Mr, King doesn’t have a corner on all the FBI The House has approved the|experience in the family, His wife, the former Internal Revenue reorganization|Miss Hazel Clark, of Washington, D.C, is a forplan, which will go into effectmer bureau employee. They met in the office automatically next Friday unlessithere.
Mr. Chelf said Mr. Truman's directive would make the subcommittee’s job “more difficult,” but that the group ‘means to ac-
including © Caucasians, Negroes and South Korean troops.
Marines Repulse
North Korea Patrols
EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Mar. 8 (UP)—U. 8.| Marines beat off North Korean patrol attacks with machine guns, rifles and grenades for the| seventh straight day today on| the fog-shrouded eastern front. At least 11 enemy soldiers were killed and one prisoner captured in the skirmishes. The Reds attacked from positions nicknamed! “Luke the Gook's Castle” by the! Leathernecks. An Air Force summary showed that American Sabhrejets destroyed or damaged 17 Com-
or two here found the King family figuratively up to their ears in the work of getting settled at 1205 N. Downey Ave.
go ceed
THERE has been little time to get around, but the agent declared a liking for what he had seen of the state's capital city. FBI offices working on a 24-hour a day schede ule allow-little time for outside pursuits, but Mr, King in other cities has triéd his hand at golf. “When I was a kid I could shoot in the 70's, but now I can't shoot below the 80's,” he cone fegges, . Other hobbies call him out of doors, too, espe cially hunting and fishing, While assigned to southern offices he took an occasional run down the gulf coast trolling for bonita and mackerel, He didn't do badly, either, gnagging 12 and 15 pounders, But that's a memory the new agent must keep fresh should he venture forth to the streams of
gE
ALL PUCKERED UP-—Line forms on the left, boys. Lovely Kathryn Grayson has a most inviting expression both in her eyes and on her lips. Last picture Katie was seen in around here was “Showboat” when her charms captured How-
f . ith. ard Keel. e Senate votes it down. A reso-| They now have two sons, “Bob,” who is 16, Indiana. : ut iii fhe to throw out the plan tana “Jim,” who is 14. Both were to be enrolled No fish in the country have so strong an avers heart, past seven days. : . scheduled to come up In the at Howe High School, and Mr. King said his two sion to being caught. y ping But Communist ground are WW by t Gl k WwW t p hy Senate Wednesday. AR = fi nit . ] Sen. Hoey was one of the 7 to| an . | ‘ » ve oer os i Ja as Ing on S ace as e ro e 5 majority of the Senate govern- Piccard Plans Another os gE | “ = | Accused ‘Miss Michigan’ Bee jet fighter crashed in enemy ter-! WASHINGTON, Mar. 8 — A gon pitchmen” will reach 500 be-|other names will turn up as the ment operations ee man. Stratospheric Climb {ies i. Marries Musician ritory after developing mechan- ¢ : | | |voted this wee | 3 : : Feo Y Bier, ping House "subcommittee on military|fore he is through. subcommittee digs further. He Mr. Truman wrote Vice Presi-| MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. Mar. 8 Vis NEW YORK, Mar. 8 (UP)ie waste, displeased at the 395 press! In response to the subcommit- reprimanded the military yester-| q.ht Alben W. Barkley yesterday ;p)._professor Jean Piccard, Peggy Ellsworth, 24, Miss Michi B dit Vi fi Kill |agents it claims to have found tee’s request for a list of such!day for failure to supply a full that next week's vote will show gg vear.old pioneer balloon ascen- gan of 1047, who was charged andi chm od $ |“so far” at the .Pentagon, de- workers, the Pentagon furnished list, ahd suggested ° that the “who it-is that is Just talking sionist, sald today he's Sung to Jecentis With casiting Sieh goy. Depu Wounds Two (cided today to take a look at the the names, positions and salaries Pentagon ‘re-examine its con- about corruption and who make one more stratosph™\ rnmeni. cheeks in bo a oY Wash., Mar. 8 (UP) |entire 161,000-man military pay- Of 184 persons. Mr. Hebert science.” that really wants to do something qjymp, possibly to find out about naire Winya, an ud y ya, Yarn. S : shortly thereafter made public| A Pentagon spokesman replied about it. { Mars. plate, —4 Ditially deat dishwaslleroll in the Capital area. another list, obtained “privately,” that Mr. Hebert originally did| | The wiry professor of aero- : The beautiful auburn - haired mistakenly shot and killed a dep-| Chairman F. Edward Hebert yo © "0 GOH P 3; > ae S. C Pri nautical engineering at the Uni- ° 0 se {[T|/{ [singer and dancer was marriéd our uty sheriff and wounded two|(D. La.) said the Defense Depart-|\ Lich showed, he said, anotherinot make clear that he wanted a U. S. Cuts Price ta has reached x yesterday in the Municipal Build. Y thers Iavestigati bb tment the sub-|21L Persons on the publicity staff complete roster of information| . bb versity of Minneso Trying to oppear wealthy has 8 Hd — Ye I TY ment Tea 1 hide I it of the Defense Department alone workers. Mr. Hebert asked for| Of Synthetic Rubber the compulsory Patitement, ape coused many o mon to live in he 10 Serge « Morrison, 30, a ponsible Country Club, police sald oda. workers and that members con.|—0Ot counting the staffs of thela list of persons holding hel WASHINGTON, Mar. 8 (UP)—|but longs to make “just one poverty. © | “Taken into custody here last Sheriff Harlan Callahan said|cluded “there must be a lot of|°CParate services. specified jobs, the spokesman The price of synthetic ruber SECERBION., o up to 100,000 feét week on a Michigan charge of * Ralph Bishop, 62, fired “11 to 15|covering up going on in other Mr. Hebert said he is sure/said, and these were provided, - | produced in government-owned ] wan to & up Se Gs DAVIDE © cated Boe shots” from a .45 automatic at|sections, too.” ; {DIShiS Ws of Joney from 28 to Ie it I do rn take my wife Never the Twain ment checks in exchange for ire ! the deputies when they opened] He said the group as soon as! [P? . ° 2 ras ” “shots” of heroin, Miss Ellsworth, quired the door of the club yesterday. |possible will oo. > study of me Pi nay Forms New French Cabinet Jn Rpts the Rar ‘Piccard said the purpose Shall Meet released on $500 bail, was due to ie The dishwasher said “I thought entire military payroll in the orp, foc rubber plants of the proposed trip would be to appear Mar. 11 in Detroit to face dies they were the stick-up men” and Washington area, which covers| PARIS, Mar. 8 (UP)—Busi-|finance minister in the new Bove ro ee he cut study cosmic rays and examine| ppmROIT, Mar. 8 (UP) -- |the charges. did not hear them say: ~ “This|ahout 91,000 civilians and 70,000|nessman Antoine Pinay, France's ernment. Popular Republican | 0. 00S ible because of expand-|the light from Mars. William Blivens pald a $40 feck- : is Je DO AAR Slkworth. 26 uniformed personnel, of whom|first rightest premier under the Robert Schuman again. will be ing production and a decrease in —yo———t less driving fine yesterday des- Worth the Price we uy orn Mh 21,000 are officers, Fourth Republic, formed a new foreign minister, indicating no the use of high-cost alcohol. Accused of Slander pite his plea that his half of | NEW YORK, Mar. 8 (UP) SUF AAS Randecker, 27, and Claude Dodd, Sees 500 Total coalition government today in a|change will be made in Frénch| a j ie BRUNSWICK, Germany, Mar.| the car didn’t get into trouble. Thirty New York University stue d gs, 43, were wounded. Both were ex-| Mr. Herbert said the subcom-|fight to stave off economic ruin|foreign policy and its key posi- Rites for Crash Victim 8 (UP)—Former Nazi Maj. Gen. Blivens, ticketed after a |dents cheerfully put up five dol. pected to recover. mittee is by no means finished for France. tion in the European Army and| NOBLESVILLE, Mar. 8 (UP) Otto Remer, who aided in smash-| crash, sald it involved only the lara apiece wo. Srysh seamalied al | The officers were called to the with its effort to ferret out “hid-| The 60-year-old independent|North Atlantic treaty —Services will be held today for|ing the 1944 plot against Hitler 18| front half fo the car, owned by |ples against the faces of stu { club house after robbers tied upden” publicists on the payroll of presented his streamlined 21-man| Most of the posts in Premier|Ernest Weaver, 71, who died in|being tried on charges of slander| a friend. He sald he owned only leaders during the school's fourth Mr. Bishop and two night watch-|the Defense Department and the cabinet to Pr ) ital t/for calling the plotters of the at-| the rear half. annual “pie fling.” The proceeds esident Vincent|Pinay’s new government went to/a Lebanon hospital yesterday o men and took $10,000 from the Army, Navy and Air Force. He|Auriol this morning. " |right-of-center party leaders or injuries sustained in a traffic ac-|tempt to overthrow the Nazis of the farce went to a fund for club’s safe. sald he expects the list of “Penta-| He will be both premier and independents. leident last Sunday. “traitors.” an outdoor dance floor. . vitally. ~ 0 arise Sororities— Blackwood on Bridge—
Muff, That Is
hold both king and jack of
Tri Delt Dublin Fair
Finesse |s Easy—Easy to
R. MUZZY contends -
North dealer
At Butler to Have
—eeence . bridge he knows all about— moa On the first lead which card — | : and that's the finesse. If 80754 should you finesse, the 10 or. [S d Nn on 95 that were true he would be the" H—A Q 10 the queen? The 10, because you i ' 1 because D—A K QJ plan to finesse twice anyway, world's greatest player caus 0—10 2 and if BOTH king and jack § nivi i — ly simple pla 8 — | HE Butler University Chapter of Delta Delta Delta this apparently ple play WEST EAST are on your right, you may get i Sorority will give its annual Dublin Fair from 8 p. m. the most dif- Mr. Abel Mrs, Keen away with no spade losers at to midnight Friday, Mar. 21, in the chapter house. cult and intri- om eg ar 2 ren The fair is held each year to raise money for eagle D—8 5 4 D—9 2 THE ODDS are also 3 to 1 scholarships. Any Butler woman more to jt:than C-AKQi3 C9386 that Mrs. Keen does not hold : student may apply. The amount merely leading SOUTH both king and jack of hearts. Fass-ROO the lqcal chapter raises is up toward an Mr, Dale But the play here is to finesse doubled by national headquar- acesquven. and 8—~A Q 10 3 the queen, not the 10, because lh ° . / ters of the organization. Last playing the H-8 3 there are only two hearts in the Istenin year scholarships totaling $600 queen when D—10 7863 South hand and there is no were presented to coeds on d hand C—¥ 135 sense taking any more risk . Honor Day. Secon on e The bidding: : than necessary. 5, T : Highlighting the event will De uve. 3. Dil NORTH RAST SOUTH WEST _ Plaving ay sugested, Mr. - oO e OPIC be a physique contest during such questions 3D Pare » » Dale had no trouble making his which an “Oomph Man" will be a5 these fo” decide: Le Alas. contract. Mr. Abel won the first HE grass-root method chosen; a pie eating competi- With finessing positions in Nobody can answer all two tricks with high clubs and of program making will yon among ihe womel's orgarn- several suits, whicH do you those questions right all the led a third club. Dummy ruffed , . ve DD izations; a dart game, and finesse first? How deep should time. But you CAN learn what and led a spade. highlight the state meeting Sponge Em,” a game in which your finesse be? Should you the odds are in various situa Mr. Dale put in the 10 and of the Indiana Women Belive Yaenibers of the chapter abandon an available finesse tions and then play with those 4 Sout to the jack. Dummy wen Voters League Thursday in are the targets for a wet entirely and try for some other . odds in your favor. “the amond return an Mor Dd state-and na- Sponge. play—an end-play or a squeeze? Today's hand is a simple one finesse of the queen of spades i tional programs for 1952-54 Pledges will present a stunt When should you take a fi- but Mr. Muzzy might have was successful. The ace of i will be presented. with a “touch of Blarney.” nesse early in a hand and when muffed it. Look at the spade ‘trumps picked up the king and Mrs. A. H. Highland, HWam- Bridge, dancing and fortune should it be deferred until the and heart suits. The odds are the finesse of the queen of mond, and Mrs. Lawrence telling will round out the eve- last possible moment? 3 to 1 that Mr. Abel will not hearts assured 10 tricks. Dorsey: will be in charge of ning’s entertainment. the national discussion, and Al ha lota Bridge T alka Mrs. Frank Cox will present {a semi-annual pledging of / s tate discussion. n y w C f tf Cl b L f [t R [+ He S10 Se orate BIA Upsilon Chapter, Alpha omens onrrac u ISTS ITS KeSUITS i tical Iota Sorority, internationa . 4 i ’ : Bn a is business honorary, will be held ESULTS of play are rie. Bubs next 2 wi ison » Contact Club, Tues, ? SS aly, 3 - ~. Ww A b . f ; — E to Mrs. Drysdale Brannon. B 0 Ln ssa in the announced by lo cal 12:30 p. m. Thursday in the Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Reich 79.5; Marion, state president, The L ola i bridge. clubs for games this Indianapolis Athletic Club. Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Stepp 67.5; members discuss the kind of The - pledge committee in- Wi foll Marott Club, Tuesday night: Mr. Mrs. E. A, Poste 66.5; program needed and make rec- cludes Misses Norma Randall, week. inners follow. ; N & 8 (Possible 189)—M. Stan- E & W (Possible 126)—Jack ommendations to their local Mildred Jones and Wilma Women's Contract Club, ley McComas Jr., Louis Harris, Quirk, K. A. Davison 80.5; Mr. boards. Local boards -recom- Breedlove along with Mrs. Al- Thurs. afternoon: N & 8 (Pos- 146." Meg. Thompson, Mrs. Ar- and Mrs. G. A. Bretzlaff 71.5 mend to the national board. berta Nelp, sponsor. sible Score 224)—Mre. E. J. 4p 0 Pratt, 98.5; Mr.'and Mrs. J. R. Nelson, Rene DuBois 70 £ 4 4 The new pledges will be Ittenbach, Mrs. V. R. Rupp George P. Ryan, 97; E & W a. au FROM THE submitted recom- Misses June Stark; Margaret 133.5; Mrs. Grace C, Busch- (Possible 168) — Mrs. Mary THE NEXT GAME will be Fenugtions) the rational poard Hann, Ina Mae Ayers, Kathy : mann, Mrs. Hal I Benham Welch, Mrs. Betty Chipman, blayen phi df m. Mas, 18 works out a proposed program, afeyerran, Iris Jordam, Char- Times photo by William A Oates Jr. 131.5: Mrs. C. C.- Mathews, Mrs. . , at ‘the spring dinner party in which is submitted back to the Nc Edmans, Sh, Ann ABWA CHARTER SIGNING—Mrs. Dora A. Ogden, Mrs. Helen Basch and Miss Ludmilia Valke 3 "RR Coleman, and Mrs. $35; Mrs. Banjul Bass, Mts Re Ig local leagues in ample time for McCall, Christine Perreault, (left to right). . Willlam F. Eckhart, Mrs. Roy Fraustein, Mr. Thompson, 96.5 Men's. Club, Mon." night, ~ consideration by all members. JoAnn Berting, Laura Isom, Goodwine 118.5 (tie); E & W (yj), monthly master point game: Again the local” leagues may Faye Unversaw and Jane Rob- . / (Possible 224)--Mrs. Lawrence N & 8 (Possible 168)—Alford submit recommendations. <The insorn ps N WwW F Iness Women S G t I Hess, Mrs. Frank Abbett 125.5; G. Tulley, Noble G. Morgan national league then”-proposes LT 48 ke e us roup ns a S Mrs. E. C. Rutz, Mrs. William GOP Women 120; Lawrence J. Welch, John . a program to the league -na-.‘ Pi Phi Mothérs= = # . T.Rose 124; Mrs. J. B. Clemans, 8. Lynn 95.5; W. L. Kirkpatrick, tional convention: pat i “The Pi Beta Phi Mothers APPOINTED officers of the newly char- Committee chairmen announced last night Mrs. Ralph Ittenbach 114. . Howard Ag "i Ee id The convention adopts. each. -¢1ib of Butler will give-& guest a ia . : u y . Accumulative scores for the T S - | { Possible 189) —Mr. Quirk; 3 item by majority vote. The: ou lunchebh, : ay tered Indianapolis Chapter, American include. Mrs. Betty Gregory. Jacobs, program; first semester of the club show oO ee nm M. Cassidy 102.5; Willlam T, state program-is adopted es « Monday 1A ihe chapter Fise Business. Women’s Association, were in- Miss Ruby Mae Ernest, housing; Mrs. Edna Mrs. Rupp leading with a 601 “Time for Living” 1s the * Masgonald, Mr, Frausteln 1015; rention uging A-Aike: Ray wr. ror. NC : : : ; , , - ups anted . Mr. hompson, arles e ale oe : B.& hae ok W.-Hanipron,. Ry km stalled at a ceremony last night in the E. Burns’ employment. Mrs, Ruth K. Holman, Jereentane. Solow 8 Jills ot 2 fun 20.1% Dresemied Madinger pst » { ®A perennial problem in demo’ Ch b to Meet j “:»4° Hotel Lincoln. . ' music, jand Miss. Sarah A. Campbell, vocatiopal. gE. J. Ittenbach, 588 per cent cil of Repubuican'Women at 1 Mallory Duplicate Club, Mon, 4 cratic organization is the ‘in-.:% ub To Ivie # SiG #€ They. are ‘Mrs. Dora A. Ogden, president; Mrs. Dorothy Dunlop, ways and means: Miss (tied); Mrs. Rutz, 575 per cent;: p. m. Wednesday. The meeting night, master point game, dividual who feels that her a THe ‘Here and. There Home-/ Mrs. Hélen Basch, vice president; Miss Ludmilia Aha y a P, AL a ANUS Mrs. M. L. Thompson, 569 per will be held in the Wilking Howell movement: Maj. Walter i voice is not heard, that policies . makers Club will meet at 10 a. Valko and Miss Frieda M. Sanders, recording Mary E. DeVore, hi:laws;. Mrs. Euva R. Cole- cent; Mrs. V. R. Newcomer, 568 Music Co, auditorium. Miller, Col. Warren Cleveland : are adopted over her head and 'm. Tuesday for a lesson in and corresponding secretaries, and Dr. Helen man, “banquet; Miss Janet Ross, social; Miss per cent; Mrs. W, W, Warrick, Mrs. Harry Harman is chair- first; 8. D. Ransburg, D. H, - i against her better judgement.” ceramics and a covered dish. Muller, treasurer. : oh Elizabeth A. South, publicity: Miss Margarita 306 per cent] Mrs. Mathews, man of hostesses. She will. be O'Herren second; Mrs. D. Hi § Mrs. Brannon pointed out. “No ~ luncheon. The session will be These officials will serve for a 90-day period 2 : ' » P EE : g8 563 per cent: Mrs. T. F. Schmidt, assisted by Mesdames Frank J: Giffin, Clarence Huetten third; 5 members of the league need in the home of Mrs. Carl Dor- when local members will elect permanent of- Kargacos, membership, and Mrs. Mayme R. 558 per cent; Mrs. Joseph A. Lahr, Lois ayer, Grace Wil- Leonard Tulaskas, Eugens * suffer thus,” she added. rel, 2245 N. Ritter Ave, «+ ficers themselves, SH Householder, courtesy. > Brower, 554 per cent,” « son and Lou A, Mead. Clinger fourth.
-
there ix one play in
Neither side vulnerable
spades, Proper play is to finesse spades twice, Te
