Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1952 — Page 3
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THURSDAY, APR. 2%, 1052
Sheriff and Deputies Squelch [School Fund County Jail Riot in Muncie
@
Times State Service - MUNCIE, Apr. 24 — Prompted the publicity given riots at thern Michigan Prison, 28 inmates of the Delaware County jall in Muncie staged their own little. riot yesterday. Sheritf W. Pete Anthony | blamed the ruckus on the Michigan riot and on jail regulations he recently began to enforce. He sald the riot started early yesterday when the prisoners | started smashing light bulbs and setting fires in the jail. They cut open one lock and a chain on a FEE. door with a piece of hacksaw aa blade that had been smuggled into the jail, he said. : All the men refused breakfast | yesterday, but by lunchtime four of them had given up the strike in favor of food. 5 Placed in Solitary Three women. held at the jail 4id not participate in the riot, he said. Late yesterday, the sheriff and his deputies moved in on the unruly prisoners and grabbed five = men they considered ringleaders. These were placed in solitary con finement until early .today, when % they were returned to their oellblocks. Sheriff Anthony said order was restored by midnight. ; He ordered all newspapers and radios barred from the jail as a means of shutting off news of @ prison riots in Michigan and 8 ew Jersey. of Ld ge He said the prisoners had com- HOLDOUT—Olin Miller of Cincinnati was the plained of delays in being taken ger sirike and riot at the Delaware County Jail to court, and objected to food er by Sheriff W, Pete Anthony, and withdrawal of telephone priv- fast and lunch. eges, . Until recently, he said, lenient! He had issued orders permitting turnkeys had permitted the pris-| prisoners to make only one phone oners to e in long-winded call at the time they were adphone conversations with friends. mitted, he said.
ih Muncie yest finally relented and took his supper last night, after missing
ers tomorrow, their regular vis- midnight.
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Late for dinner? Relax! You won't delay the others at home—not when the telephones nearby. In seconds it lets the family know— saves "em from waiting . . . worrying, too! That's why —wherv the convenience of others coynts—so many people depend on the telephone.
AAR x
AIRES £2 ms,
", RS
HIGHWAYS OF SPEECH
++. more cable is being installed to bring you better service
"Cross the countryside and in cities and towns more and more cable is going in! o About 96 per cent of all Indiana Bell wire is sheathed in lead or plastic cable to protect the vital voiceways from the weather. When we buy new cable, poles, wire, trucks— and the hundreds of other items needed to fur: nish you good telephone service —we cannot escape today’s high prices: But we're going right ahead with a job that must be done despite skyrocketing costs: x : : This year we're spending more than a million eomplared ol lt wre goby dollars a month to bring you better and better » 2 telephone service:
Tolaphone service coming wpl A cable crew, shoum above, is splicing aerial cable. The
INDIANA BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
“
United Press Telephotol
last prisoner to accept food following the hun. erday. Miller, considered the tugised.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
4 $10,000-a-year job Wednesday.
ak-
-
As punishment for the riot, itors’ day, and starting immediSheriff Anthony said he would ately the jail lights would be not permit visitors to the prison-/turned out at 10 p. m. instead of|to reach the state semifinals.
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(Audit Sought At Anderson
‘Request Follows Chadd Ouster
Women Voters will get you fit you don't watch out. For years
brooms on “bum” candidates “bum” government
tion forum at the World War Me-
By TED KNAP . A special state audit of) funds handled by Archie R. Chadd, ousted superintendent of Anderson schools, was sought today by the Anderson school board, The request was made to the State Board of Accounts after a special meeting in which the five school. boai® membérs voted unanimously for the audit, They pointed out the school system's financial books have not been | audited for more than three years. | Mr. Chadd, who soared in popularity as Anderson's high school basketball coach but slipped as chief administrator, loses his
He has been superintendent since 1942, Last Audit in 1948
In a letter mailed to.the State Board of Accounts late yesterday, the school board members said: “Due fo the fact that we are changing superintendents, we think it is only fair that an immediate audit be made of our books, None has been made since 1048.” As basketball coach, Mr. Chadd led Anderson High School to its first state championship in 1935, then took the team to the finals in 1936 and recaptured the title in. 1937. During his nine years as coach, Anderson never failed
But as superintendent, he ran into trouble with the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools which suspended - Anderson schools for many failures to meet standards, And school board members reported they received many complaints from teachers about how Mr, Chadd dealt with them.
Fill Place Monday
The board last year cut his contract to one year, them voted a month ago to end it. Reported holding an Inside track to succeed Mr. Chadd is G. Everett Ebbertt, principal of Anderson High School, The new superintendent will be named Monday. By a split vote, the board this week voted to give Mr. Chadd a teaching contract from May 1 until school is out. The deposed superintendent told The Times he
school in Anderson.
Candidate Harriman To Keep Security Job
WASHINGTON, Apr. 2¢ (UP) —W. Averell Harriman does not intend to give up his post as Mutual Security Administrator now that he has become an active candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, Chairman James P. Richards (D. 8. C.) of the House Foreign Affairs Committee sted yesterday that Mr. H. abandon one role or the other, Mr. Richards said the pending $7.9 billion foreign aid bill is in for enough congressional trouble without getting mixed up in the political race, Mr. Harriman replied in a formal statement that he has always conducted foreign aid business ‘on a nonpartisan plane” and will “continue to do so.”
McGrath Says He'll
Always Be a Democrat MIAMI, Fla., Apr. 24 (UP)— Former U, 8. Atty. Gen. J. Howard McGrath, who resigned under fire in a dispute over investigation of corruption in government, will remain an active Democrat “for as long as I live,” Mr. McGrath refused to in-
idential nomination. as he spoke to some 4000 persons in Bayfront Park here last night. Neither would he discuss the circumstances surrounding his abrupt “resignation” as attorney general after he fired government investigator Newbold Morris, “My denials would only add to the confusion,”
ATTENTION TO GUESTS SATISFY THOSE ‘DINING IN
RESTAURANT
7 NORTH MERIDIAN STREET Close to Monument Circle
for runaway wives
Read the fantastic truth abowt our mediaeval divorce laws, Laws that can force a man to rt anunfaithful he into prison if he doesn’t pay up. | | ges | |
Laws so one-sided that } must break the law to do real || justice.
Read how an ordinary mar. iage can end in a whirlwind of a and financial s in “ALIMONY: WEAPON OF FEMALE REVENGE.”
ay (Joronel sow on sale
has no other plans than teaching|mother,”
dorse any candidate for the pres- iy. tiok belonged to a Kenosha, Wis, firm.
( shocking rewards I
morial at 8:15 p. m, to select the top national and foreign issues
The Indianapolis League of conditions. The League is conducting to- . night's program in co-operation they trained their “clean up"iwith I, 8, Ayres & Co. Life Mag0d azine and the National te Tonight, however, the civic a: a Taio ei, - conscious women look for the keyion a nation-wide radio hook-up issues in the 1952 election cam- may 1 along with similar pro paign, They are having an elec-ieramy in. 20 other cities.
though the League of Women Voters has entered into the national and foreign affairs fore
Al
Mrs. Frank Cox, the State
within the county. was issued by Mrs, on townships.
From the {facts the My presented, it ahpeated the Ine" dianapolis League Voters will go on record at theis
's board eof rectors, told of the various lapping governmental functions.
A report on coun ernment po Ee Bome gardner, Mrs, Jerome Bash spoke ! womehs® Women
a
wil
he a vagn 1” ol, Candidates Face ‘Mighty Broom’ | PO LOUIE. | SAF JA YO0E whut BOGE oh 8 Yenchasn ti Shans Wty, (| 1
of the day. -/annual meeting May 20 to ; As a result, they hope to be able husAtcally, It has cot ONE Elimination . of the. fee to report what Hoosiers think|ing past, system for sheriffs and county about living costs, taxes, civil Report Issued clerks. wr rights, Korean War and the . TWO--Creation of & single ade... United Nations. For e, yesterday the In- ministrative head for county, . ‘Broom Treatment’ : fssued a re-. THREE - Elimination of juss Candidates, both local and na- n governmental affairs in tices of the peace In Marlow +
tional, who don't face up to the
It worked with devastating effect
Eagerto Unveil Sex Appeal
Anne Baxter
HOLLYWOOD, Apr, 24 (UP)— Anne Baxter, billed ag one of the
actresses, belleves this reputation makes her sound “inhibited and dull” and she’d like to unveil her sex appeal. Miss Baxter has an Oscar at home and another academy nomination. But this, she complained, has kept her sex appeal In shackles. So she’s turned blonde, slinimed down her hips ahd snared a role In a movie in which she does an Egyptian belly dance while a topaz in her navel. “I've been presented as terribly nice, a good actress, wife and she sighed. "This 1s wonderful-—but it's not Interesting, is 1t? That's not what aetresses are supposed to be, “I'm no holier-than-thou. I'm not Gree-ah Gahson. But the way I've been presented, I'd be bored with myself if I really were that way. I wouldn't even invite me to dinner. “The picture,” she went on, “is hatching me.”
French Village Nearly
Emptied as Water Rises TIGNES, France, Apr. 24 (UP) ~—Only a handful of residents re-
mained In this doomed Alpine village today as water from a dammed-up river rose steadily higher, flooding. ground floors of some homes in the outskirts. The community was ordered evacuated recently to make way for a hydro-electric project that will put the entire area under water, Officials said the village would be deserted by the end of the week. '
Driver Burns to Death
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Apr. 24 (UP)—8tate police were seeking today to identify a truck driver who burned to death last night when his. truck overturned . on Ind. 34 near Mace. Police said
Marion
fjnest of the dramatic movie]
County,
STRAUSS SAYS:
MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS FILLED (L. 1561)
It toak the issues, can expect the housewife's| League two years to complete the “broom treatment” -- otherwise| survey. Sixty women aided in its known as the sweep out of office, Prepara
+ you at sate af any
County.
a
WE GIVE YOU
MAC
Here, sir, is a great The RIBBED knit Ts soft, porous i# up and you can see throw
He a kerchiofsditios in n
shrinks not’ at all—and wears Hill v tod 1H ;
WHITE and COLORS—that you
FOUR-Creaflon of 8 purchasing department for tion, the League reported ty.
GENTLEMEN:
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£
0
- A
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iy
STORE OPEN TONIGHT [THURS] TILL 8:30
ought fo see! Blus, Green, Gray, Maroon
Sizes 30 to 44 i
NYLA-CORD-—that's the Heket! 5
The White UNDERSHIRTS
+ 3.30
The White or Colored BOXER SHO
3.30
CLIMALE NE loosens stubborn dirt, cuts’
AT.YOUR GROCERS
L. STRAUSS & CO.
RTS. |
THE MAN'S STORE . |
grease fast—softens water—saves V2
the soap. Used with soap
CLIMALENE
soap or detergent can do alone. wm
or detergent gets clothes cleaner than
Rt : to en 5
Cleanest Playtogs 've Ever Seen!
Raho eg SS
A i
GL HAN A a
ER en
