Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 March 1952 — Page 22
- rier Ys -:
wd
A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
‘ROY W. HOWARD ~ WALTER LECKRONE President ! Editor
PAGE 22
Business Manager Wednesday, Mar, 19, 1952
mes Pubiishember of EA Berv-
. Owned and published daily by indianapolis {rs Co. 214 Mari and Bt ostal Zone Tnited Press -Secripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance fce and Audit Bureau .of Circulation
ce In Marion County § cents a #opy for dally and ive tor Bandar ay bY carrier daily and ry ie a week daily only 25¢. Bunday only 10c Mall rates in Indiana daily and Sunday $1000 a year daily $500 a year Bunday nly $500; all other states (I 8 possessions Canada and exica dally §1.10 a month Sundar 0c a conv. oT 5
Telephone PL aza 5551
v
Give Iight ana the Penpie Will, Fina 1hetr Nwn Way
| SERIPRS ~ NOWARD |
wo
We Buy, but Don't Sell ~
ERIC A. JOHNSTON is urging an all-out government campaign to promote private investments abroad to ease the foreign-aid burden on the American taxpayers. We wish the gentleman all the success in the world. But the probabilities are that he will have to wait until there is a change of administrations in Washington to sell a revolutionary idea like that. The present policy, as Mr. Johnston should know, is the opposite of what he suggests. What foreign government would be so foolish as to encourage private investments from abroad when it can get money it wants from the U. 8. government, without obligation or consideration? The U. 8. is facing a $14 billion deficit, yet Mr. Truman wants to give money to governments which have treasury surpluses, and which are not allied’ with us in any way. One of these is Pakistan, which had a favorable trade balance of $24 million last year. L This money for Pakistan would be used to build power and transportation facilities and to lay the ground for industrial expansion. When the United States needed similar facilities in its industrial infancy, it encouraged private investments from abroad. British capital was a substantial contributor to the railway construction which was such a vital factor in our own industrial development.
. 8» “na
BUT THE economists, so-called, who dominate government thinking nowadays would: regard the use of private capital for improvements of that kind as a horse and buggy idea. Indonesia sells twice as much to this country as she buys from us, and Siam sells us three times what she buys from us. ‘Yet despite the trade balances in their favor, Mr. Truman wants to give both of these countries money from the U, 8, Treasury. The island of Ceylon is one of the richest areas in the world. With its large deposits of iron, manganese, copper, platinum and tin, Ceylon would be an attractive field for the private investor. But Uncle Sam is standing in the way. . Ceylon sells more than it buys on the world market. But our government is concerned because Ceylon has to buy twosthirds of its food with part of the money it earns from its tea and rubber exports. So we are giving this rich island money to expand its food production. (Ceylon, by the way, is still selling rubber to Red China.) It is easy to see why foreign governments are making no effort to attract’ American private investments.
That Book -
IKE ANY other book, the volume called “Mr. President,” “just published by William Hillman in concert with President Truman, will provoke a variety of opinions from its readers. (See review on this page.) But the opinions are much more likely to be based on the political content. and the historical accuracy or inaccuracy of the book, rather than its literary quality or “plot.” For there is no attempt at style in the book, and if there is any “plot” it simply is that a friendly book about the President is being published in an election year. Publisher and authors disclaim any political intention, -but the coincidence is there for anyone to guess at. The compiler, Mr. Hillman, and the President both say the book was put together with a free hand. But obviously Mr, Truman either did not turn over to Mr. Hillman, or did not permit him to use, much material which might have put the administration in a less radiant glow.
LJ » » LJ » ”.
THE INTENT, apparently, is to picture the President as a “country boy” who was right in almost everything he did and acted always in a most direct and folksy manner. On that basis alone, there is enough in the book to stir up one of the snarlingest political debates in a generation. Taken in the perspective of the seven-year, worldwide uproar in which the Truman administration has been so conspicuous, it probably will set off the loudest wrangle since “Gone With the Wind.” The fact that the book is so revealing in some spots, and clams up in others, will only add more fur to the furor. At one point in the book, Mr. Truman says one thing he just never would do as a politician was handle money. Which may explain why he has become the biggest peacetime spender in history. But if the book makes as much money as it stirs up controversy, he may find ‘himself handling a tidy “side” income. In any case, Mr. Truman, a man who hasn't needed to try, has found a new way to get himself in the center of
another hot national debate. : . »
Behindhand Is Too Late
[AST FALL, the Internal Revenue Bureau fired the 7 Brooklyn tax collector because ‘of irregularities in his own tax returns. This was developed after a congressional committee investigated the Brooklyn office. Now the tax collector for the Manhattan (New York) office, who was appointed only last August to succeed a collector fired for “incompetence,” has been dismissed because his personal tax returns were “irregular.” : ‘Eventually, it may occur to the White House to check up a tax collector's tax return before he is appointed, \ instead of months later.
Purgers and Purgees
"THERE ARE reports from the winter White House at ; Key West that President Truman is thinking up a campaign to purge some of his chief hecklers in the Senate, especially those in his own party.
cently their own ideas about who should be President. ~~ Which suggests that perhaps Mr. Truman is really thinking about a “counterpurge” campaign,
HENRY W, MANZ
But these same gentlemen have been indicating ‘re-
mn .
-
. - WASHINGTON, Mar. 19—President Truman is pictured as a man almost wholly without fault in a bok published yesterday. The President ‘, wrote most of the volume, (82e editorial.) The book reveals that tn 1948 Truman set . down this view: “. .. I think 1 have been right in the approach to all questions 90 per cent of the time since I took over...”
The book, ealled “Mr. President,” was com-.
piled hy William Hillman, Washington newspaperman and radio commentator. It was published by Fariar, Straus and Young; $5.00. It was compiled from Truman's private notes and diaries and from exclusive Interviews given Hillman. The President broke all precedents to make these personal papers avallable for publication. No man while still President has ever done this before. The purpose of the 253-page hook, in Hillman's words, "is to show the mind of a man and not to write a final history.” 5 br» IN A letter to Hillman authorizing use of the private documents, Truman indulged in a monumental understatement when he said, "1 expect thepe will be those who will construe this as a political act.” He added, “You and I know bhetter." Perhaps never will knowledge held so closely be more widely challenged. The President's papers repeat time after time that his major goal is peace. If the hook were read by someone unfamiliar with the President's background he would conclude that the relationship between Truman and Boss Tom Pendergast of Missouri was almost casual and devoid of any aspects that might be criticized. 4 %
THE President speaks out against corruption, but there 1s no mention of gifts accepted by White House associates, and the volume does not dwell on the recent scandals. Truman fancies himself, the book proves. as an expert not only on history but also on generals. Some of the quotations from Truman's private papers make it difficult to remember that this is the man who decided to use the atomic bomb,sthe man who sponsored the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance, the fight against aggression in Korea, the ®nan who was elected President in a miraculous campaign, and the man who has been stalked by assassins. This may explain why the President’s papers show that one of his favorite words is “fantastic.” . The papers show that on Jan. 5, 1946, Truman told his then Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, “I do not think we should play compromise any longer” with Russia. He wrote a memo he read to Byrnes, criticizing him for falling to keep the President closely advised about the Moscow conference, and making clear that he, Truman, wanted to fix final policy. “* S & IN THIS memo he sald Russia had acted in a “high-handed and arbitrary” manner toward Poland. “At Potsdam,” the memo goes on, “we were faced’ with an accomplished fact and were by circumstances almost forced to agree to Russian occupation of Eastern Poland and the occupation on the part of Germany east of the Oder River by Poland. It was a high-handed outrage.” His reason is that “at the time” we were anxious for Russia to join us in the war against Japan. Later, the President concedes, we discovered the Reds were not needed. “.. . The Russians have been a headache to us ever since,” He warned Byrnes that unless Russia is faced with “an iron fist and strong language another war is in the making.” “I'm tired of babying the Soviets,” he added. He alsc said: “We should rehabilitate China and create a strong central agreement there. We should do the same for Korea.” (A facsimile of this memo shows the word “agreement” might actually have been ‘“government.”) Here are other Truman thoughts on foreign affairs: Po Sb OCT. 19, 1945: Maj. Gen. Pat Hurley, American ambassador to China, and Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer were among the President's callers. He wrote: “Discussed China. I told them my policy is to support Chiang Kal-shek.” July 19, 1948: “, , , A meeting with Gen. Marshall and Jim Forrestal on Berlin and the Russian situation. .,. I made the decision 10 days ago to stay in- Berlin. Jim wants to hedge. . . . I insist we will stay in Berlin—come what may.” : 1948— “There is a lot of conversation about a meeting between Stalin and me and I have always said that if Stalin wants to come to Washington and visit the U. 8. I would be glad to see him, but I can't see where anything would be gained by a conversation with him." Dec. 8, 1950: “We had conference after conference on the jittery situation facing the country, Attlee, Formosa, Communist China, Chiang Kai-shek, Japan, Germany, France, India, etc. I have worked for peace for five years and six months and it Jooks like World War III is near.” ? On the day he signed the order firing Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Apr. 10, 1951, ‘the President wrote a letter containing this sentence: “Even the Chiefs of Staff came to.the conclusion that civillan control of the military was at stake and I didn’t let it stay at stake very long.” on 5) o>
HILLMAN believes that the President considers his Point Four program the most important peace policy of his administration. , The President also believes his foreign policy has been consistent. “Yes,” he told Hillman, ‘I. have had four Secretaries of State,. of course—but there has been no basic change in the foreign policy as I have laid it down.” The President told Hillman, “I rarely write angry letters.” And missing from the book is the one he wrote to the Washington Post critic who lambasted the singing of his daughter, Margaret, But the book does contain an exerpt_from A Truman diary referring to this matter. It says, in part: "Margie held a concert here in D, C. on Dec. 5th. It was a good one.-. . . “A frustrated critic on the Washington Post wrote a lousy review, The only thing, Gen. Marshall said, he didn’t criticize was the varnish on the piano. He put my baby as low as he could. . . . “It upset me and I wrote him what I thought of him. . . Included in the book is the letter which ended friendly relations between the President and Bernard Baruch, Truman had asked Baruch to serve on the Democratic Finance Committee in 1948. Baruch-declined.: The President wrote: “A great many honors have passed your way, both to.you and your family, and it seems when the going is rough it is a one-way street. I'm sorry ‘that this is so.” > db THE PRESIDENT is against corruption. “I have always felt deeply about this subject of corruption,” he told Hillman. “There is nothing I detest so much as a crooked politician or corrupt government official. But the type of businessman who is a fixer is even lower ih my estimation. : “I have recommended that collectors of internal revenue be replaced by officials operating under civil service. And I have directed that study be made to see if we cannot make district attorneys and U. 8. marshals subject to “civil service. There is going to be a howl from the patronage boys all the way down the street.”
But I will fight for this vital and urgent
change.” ; “He also said: “Yes, I have had some men around here with the itch for power or selfaggrandizement .-. . I have had two or three Cabinet members and executive assistants who have gotten big heads ., . I still trust people,
.
8%
partnership with him.
.all, plucked this Jim
» -
: | ; y
The Indianapolis Times "OMTICAL CONTROVERSY . . . By Marshall McNeil ~~ LF Truman’s Book About Truman Paints Picture
because I believe the majority of ‘them can be trusted. - o BS Toil yd oe “MANY Presidents have had what is known as ‘palace intrigue’ or ‘palace bickering.’ You always find that there is an excedent chance for jealousy and bickering among people who
‘are. close to the front of power. You have to
watch that all the time. Most of the times I have had to make changes in the official family around the White House is when someone gets too big for his breeches, or he makes it
_unpleasant for those that he has to serve.”
And the President wrote: “Now don't get ft into your head I have:a ‘Palace Guard'-1 haven't.” > The President furnished Hillman with a long, specially prepared memorandum on his family background, his business experiences both before
$ so. sp 4
Tai @ -
and after World War I, and his military experiences. Joan : . e “The. President also furnished another long memorandum on his “relations with the Pendergast organization.” I. He concedes that there has been “much speculation about my relationship with T. J. Pendergast (Tom). He became a powerful political boss in Missouri afteg 1926.” 0b. db DURING World War I he became “very well acquainted” with James M. Pendergast, son of Michael J. Pendergast, older brother of Tom. In 1921, according to the President's memo, Jim Pendergast brought his father, M. J., to see Truman at the haberdasher store in Kansas City he ran with Eddie Jacobson, the one that later went broke. “M. J. asked me if I would consider the nomination to the County Court from
Come on, Harry—Time's A-Wastin'
‘a
Fisk
Ln ' mm
MR. EDITOR: Open letter to A. J. Schneider: Do you haunt strikes? Please put away your shroud, call a Red Cab, drive down Market St., around the Circlc, past the bus station and up Illinois St. to the Red Cab Co. Those picket lines you see in operation downtown and at the front and back doors ‘of Red Cab Co. are manned by striking Red Cab drivers. We don’t seem to have the “inside dope” that you have, for we are still on strike. We have been on strike 24 hours a day for nearly a month. We have not “failed.” We have been hindered by a group of “scab” drivers, many of whom are steadily employed on other jobs, but are willing to work part-time at Red Cab as “strikebreakers” on another man’s job. We still strike. You can perhaps by now, see that we are still working (without pay) to put Red Cab in, not “out of business.” a ‘ oD » WE FEEL that our strike has merit. We know that the U. 8. government sanctions our desire to have a union at Red Cab Co. I chal. lenge you to test me, Mr. Schneider. I can ghow proof of these statements. As to your statement, “The venture into the taxi business by a union will be just another
HOOSIER FORUM—"‘Strikes’
"I do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it."
PR0C0EENNIITNNeTEnal
proof of the ‘uneconomic theories’ and demands of the unions.” . .. These are very brave predictions from a man who oh Mar. 6, 1952, stated that he was without even a hazy idea as to what the strike was about. My predictions are, that if the union wishes to go into the cab business it will succeed. My reasons follow: ONE: A cab company, born out of a strike for union recognition, will have the support of every union-minded cab rider in Indianapolis. TWO: A “Hoosier Veterans Cab Co.” wll have the support of veterans organizations. THREE: A man who had 22 years experience in the building of Red Cab Co. to a million dollar corporation, is now the advisor for the taxi division of the union. FOUR: I, who have had 14 years experience at Red Cab Co., believe that the best drivers of Red Cab are on strike today. FIVE: The people of Indianapolis are ready for a better taxi deal. As to the “several vacant licenses” which you mentioned in your letter, get them quick, Mr. Schneider. Several other people have been looking for them for years. The Times has already started clarification of the paper monopoly (see Mar. 15). Don’t you like strikes, Mr. Schneider? —John (Red) Stafford, Striking Cab Driver
OFFICERS ON SPOT . . . By Frederick C. Othman ‘Jim Yellow’ Lifts Lid on Dope Sales
WASHINGTON, Mar. 19—Now I don’t know who to believe about the U. 8. Capital's shocking (a word I use advisedly) dope scandal. The question is how low can mortal man get?
There's nobody worse than a scoundrel like coffee-colored James (Jim Yellow) Roberts, who peddled $60,000 worth gl of narcotics a month until finally he was shoved behind bars. Nobody worse, that is, unless it could be a policeman in depraved
Sen. Matthew Neely (D. W. Va.), who has vowed to make the District of Columbia the decentest city of
Yellow briefly from the city jail to testify tha he paid better than $1000 a month for a year and a half to San. INedly h ot Police Lt. Hialmar H. P eat. Carter and Sgt. Willlam L. Taylor of the narcotics squad. For this, he said, they allowed him to operate, advised him when the heat was on, re-
turned to him heroin they'd taken by mistake
from his employees, and once served as delivery
boys for a suitcase filled with $10,000 worth of:
cocaine.
Word Worth Nothing
ORDINARILY, United States Senators would not bother to consider anything said by a knave like Jim Yellow. Honor he has not. His word is worth nothing. But this time the gentlemen listened. : The trouble was that Lt. Carper the day before could not recall where he got the currency he deposited every month in his bank account. He just couldn't explain. The §enators-let him sleep overnight on that, When-he returned, he said he was a sick man, who needed time to remember the source of his income. All he did know, he insisted, was that he'd never taken money from a dope peddler.
So Sen. Neely ordered the guard to haul in-
Jim Yellow, who was, until jailed in 1949; the most notorious- dope “ dealer in- Washington's little Harlem. .. In those days he rode in a
4
Cadillac much like that of Lt. Carper and he was the most generous spender on U 8t. No wonder. His sales of adulterated drugs netted him $30,000 a month,
Tells of Deal
ALL THIS Jim -Yellow admitted. As casually he told how he never would have entered the nefarious business {ff he hadn't made a deal with Lt. Carper and Sgt. Taylor. At first he paid $500 a month to them, he said. Then they raised their fee t0.$1000 monthly. That still wasn't all. . “They shook me down for extras a couple of times a month,” Jim Yellow said. “They'd have birthdays’ three or four times a year. Then I'd have to buy them Scotch whisky by the case. The lieutenant came for his, but I always had to deliver the sergeants.” Sometimes Jim Yellow would. take the monthly $1000 to the lieutenant at his country club, he said, and sometimes he'd fold it in a newspaper and drop it on the floor of the narcotics squad car. One time when the federals had on the heat and he had a shipment arriving from New York, he said Lt. Carper was kind enough to shag out to the airport and bring it to him a cardboard box containing $10,000 worth of what he called glue. He meant heroin heavily adulterated with cornstarch and crushed aspirin tablets.
Seized His Salesmen —
TWICE, HE SAID Lt. Carper arrested his salesmen and confiscated their stock of dope. “ When he learned that they worked for Jim Yellow, he returned the merchandise, Jim Yellow added.
This sordid tale was two hours in the telling. While Jim Yellow. was putting it on the record, the Police Department suspended Lt. Carper and Sgt. Taylor. Other officers hurriedly nabbed 11 alleged dope dealers, several of whom had been ‘mentioned in the Senatorial proceedings. The deputy grabbed Jim Yellow by the arm and rushed him back to jail, where he is serving from five to 15 years. A dirty deal, he said, as he went. He was paying the lieutenant for
protection, he lamented. Then why .didn't he
protect? Jim Yéllow said he couldn't understand. wT 9 : J 2 Z :
Of Faultless Man
8 a:
vu
the Eastern District. I told him I would.” Truman won, but lost when he ran for re-election in 1924. s Subséquently, he was elected Presiding Judge of the County Court, taking office Jan. 1, 1927, The President's memo continues: “Then I "had my first contacts with T. J. Pendergast and Joseph B. Shannon. They were interested in County patronage and also in county purchases. . . . There were about 900 patronage jobs and they could be the foundation of a political organization. T. J. Pendergast was interested in having as many friends in key positions as possible but he always took the position that if a man didn’t do the job he was supposed to do, fire him and get someone who would. I always followed such a policy.” Trumar sponsored. bond issues for county roads and a courthouse. > Pb @ “WHEN the court was ready to let the first road contracts Mr. Pendergast called me and told me that he was in trouble with the local road contractors and would I meet and.talk with them. I told him I. would. I met them with T. J. P. present. They gave me the old song and dance about being local citizens and taxpayers and that they should have an inside track to the construction contracts. I told them that the contracts would be let to lowest bidders wherever they came from and that the specifications would be adhered to strictly. T. J. turned to his friends and said, ‘I told you that he’s the contrariest man in the county. Get out of here’ When they were gone he said to me ‘You carry put. your commitments to the voters.’ I did just that. But this was a three-man court and the two bosses, Pendergast and Shannon, had the power to interfere with me, but they didn't use it. Tom Pendergast was always a man of his word with me. . . . “T. J. Pendergast never talked to me about my action as county judge—except in the routine matter of party patronage and that one time when he supported me on the bond issue contracts. He got in touch with me once when I was in the Senate and that was when Sen. Alben Barkley was running for floor leader. Jim Farley called Mr. Pendergast and asked him to call me and ‘tell’ me to support Barkley. Pendergast called me from Colorado Springs and I told him that I was pledged to Pat Harrison. . . . I voted for Pat. . .. When Barkley was elected I supported,him loyally. “On no other occasion did T. J. Pendergast ever talk to me about my actions in the Senate.” The memo continues: “I never deserted him when he needed friends. Many for whom he'd done much more than he ever did for me ran out on him when the going was rough. I didn’t do that—and I am President of the United States in my own right! * Ag of 0 0
“BECAUSE Pendergast was convicted of income tax fraud and went to Federal Prison at Leavenworth, he has been used by people opposed to me in an effort to discredit me. But nobody has ever been able to hurt me politically by slander and abuses. : “... After I was through in the county at home, several grand juries, both state and Federal, went over my career as a county judge
with a fine tooth comb and of course they
could only give me a clean bill of health.” Hillman asked the President about palitical bosses, and here's what the President said: “Bosses are usually men who are interested in the political game, who are willing to put themselves out and do everything possible for the people—accommodate them—really to have the welfare of their constituents at heart. “But like all men . . . bosses go to seed. Take most politicians. They never get out until they die or are kicked out. “When a political boss stays too long and gets too much power, then he is no longer benevolent. He is a danger.” The book does not forget Truman’s obvious dislike of most of the press. >
EARLY in his career as President, having made an address to the nation on the Potsdam conference, he wrote as of Aug. 11, 1945: “Well, the speech seems to have made a hit according to all the papers. Shows you never can tell, I thought it was rotten.” Thereafter, the President when he refers to the press, usually calls it the “kept” press. He also speaks of the “paid” radio. After ordering the special session of Congress in‘his acceptance speech at the Chicago convention in 1948, True man noted: “I called a special session of Congress. My, how the opposition screams. I am going to ate tempt to make them meet their platform prom ises before the election. That is, according to the ‘kept’ press and the opposition leadership, ‘cheap politics." I wonder what ‘expensive polftice’ will’ be like. We will see.” He didn’t miss taking another swat at the press in his memo on his World War I exe periences. Truman wrote: & “On Oct. 27, 1918, we were moving along the road in France from one front line zone to another when a French newspaper was distributed along the line. Headlines in black let. ters informed us that an armistice was on. Just then a German 150 shell burst to the right of the road and another to the left. “One of the sergeants remarked, ‘Captain,
those G. D. Germans haven't seen this paper.’ :
Another tough old sergeant remarked after these two -explosions, ‘My God, I've swallowed me chew!” On Nov. 7, Roy Howard “sent a message to the U. 8S. A. announcing a false armistice. Such false newspaper reports are
terrible things.” (Editor's note: The Howard Armistice report was never published in France.) > SS
THE President's story of his early life contains one interesting anecdote. He recalls that he and his brother, Vivian, had diptheria. He writes: “Along in January, my brother and I had terrible cases of diphtheria—no antitoxin in those days. They gave us ipecac and whisky, Lye hated the smell .of both ever since.” nd, finally, there's another ins the President. ips. tot It was soon after he became President on May 27, 1945, when he confided to his diary: “We had a picture show tonight: Jeanette MacDonald in ‘Springtime.’ Everybody, in«
cluding me, cried a little—so we all enjoyed the show.”
Lenten Meditation
Jesus Answers Our
Questions About the Word
” THE ETERNAL DILEMMA
Render therefore to Caesar the things that are Caesar's. end to God the things that ore God's. Matthew 22:21. Read verses 15-22.
It was the tightest trap ever set for Jesus, laid by the Sanhedrin, the Pharisees, the Herodians and the Zealots. The Herodians supported the Roman domination. The Zealots held that Israel being a theocracy, and God the only king, it was unlawful to pay tribute to any foreign power, So the ‘question was framed so that whatever Jesus answered he would be cought by his tormentors. Is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar or not? We face a similar question every day. To what extent is it lawful in God's sight to give obedience to the state? «Caesar's face was on the coin. Caesar had a right to a fair share of the money system he had established. Yes, pay yow taxes to Caesar; but not your soul, not your conscience. These belong to God. When Caesar asks to be worshiped, he asks too much, for Jesus saw a day coming, described by Shakespeare, “No bending knee will call thee Caesar now.” : Here is the eternal dilemma; where does the claim of the state end and the claim of God begin? The state may help order our_ civil relations, but God holds the power over our minds and souls.
Let Us Pray: O Lord of all, toke thy place on the throne of our hearts and rule us in all things through Jesus Christ: our Lord. Amen. -
WEDNE
Peruvian Sunday by |
- interested.
Miss Iris | American cot program is s lectures by fi She'll talk of Peru—and tions with th tell: about rev one in 1938. ] best the frien “organization “You have and you follo Marian Colle, here two yea ship.
Visiting
Mr. Stinebay
Ten organi from Manche Manchester, Two Indians turn to Man day and Sat: Heading th in its tour o Dr. Carl W. partment hes Wilbur 8S. Michigan St. baugh, 211 V tend a mee trustees. Mr. of George School, is a 1 southern Ind Church of f sponsors the baugh is pris
.Both are I
trustees, Mr. secretary of Night of A jitterbug edy skits are Theta Rho ( Lambda Sort opens at 8 | hall at Nort Sts. Mrs. M: Edna Edwar will be featur hold a social tomorrow wit 21291, N. Ca
New Org
Omega Nu sorority will Psi, at Shell will be held ington at 11 Alpha, Lam chapters, Inc In charge Mrs. Lawr
Glenn’s Val
A
