Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1952 — Page 3
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HOW TO GET RICH IN WASHINGTON. . . No. 12—
Lawyers Hold the Key to Easy Wealth
By BLAIR BOLLES. One ethical reform is necessary if we return to the principle of equal justice, which is at the heart of the American way of life, ‘ Lawyers must abandon some of their present ‘mmunities if the flow of privilege is to be dammed. It is hard to get rich in Washington without the help of a lawyer. Many Washington lawyers suffer from confusion about their loyalties. The profession as a whole should set up standards to end this confusion. Lawyers in public office, for
example, sometimes cannot for- .
get their obligation to the firms from which they have resigned or taken a leave of absence. » - ” WHILE Democratic Chairman Boyle was helping the party by arranging favors for preferred Americans, he was also helping his former law
partner, Max Siskind, who found clients among Boyle's beneficiaries.
Charles Shaver presumably gave up his association with the law firm of Chase & Williams to become counsel to the Senate’ Committee on Small Business in 1950. But when the Fleisher Engineering and Construction Co. of Minneapolis, a client of Chase & Williams, obtained a contract to build the Chalfonte Hotel in Miami Beach, Shaver persuadedthe RFC to approve a loan of $1.1 million for the construction. The RFC had refused the loan three times before they were importuned by Shaver and Flo Bratton, the secretary of Vice President Barkley. She was a friend of Sam Fleisher, president of the engineering company. After the visit from Shaver and Mrs. Bratton the RFC directors changed their minds, » ” 2 LAWYERS. in private practice at times balked investigations of the Fulbright committee by their claims that they could divulge nothing about the steps they had taken to help their clients get the loans. They said that it would violate the sacred confidence between counsel and client. In a court or other judicial proceeding, lawyers have a duty to defend their clients, and the inviolability of secrecy in the relationship between the two safeguards justice. The situation is completely different when the lawyer merely acts as the agent for a businessman endeavoring to improve his business. The businessman himself would be subject to questioning about his actions. But the lawyer who becomes his intermediary is tempted to draw a curtain over the actions simply because he is a lawyer, . E J = GROSS exploitation of the lawyer's privilege harms the
good names of lawyers in gen-:
eral and keeps in the shadows the evidence of corruption yet undiscovered. In the name of specious justice, shoddy lawyers solicit clients by promises of “influence.” They will go on furthering injustice until their honest colleagues require all members of the fraternity to dedicate themselves to some higher purpose
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last installment of a series from . the recent book, HOW TO GET RICH IN WASHINGTON, published by W. W. Norton & Co. It offers some ideas for damming the flow of “easy money.”
than helping rich clients tap the Treasury in return for a share of the loot under the guise of a fee,
AMERICANS can save their country from destruction by evil, Their first task is to take to heart Lincoln's solemn phrase: “Government of the people, by the people, for the people.” That calls for a resurgence of popular interest in the political life of America, It means popular action. ! Americans cannot straighten things out by donning sackcloth and ashes, Nor can they save the heart of their system by establishing commissions on ethics to teach adult public servants the difference between right and wrong. We do not need a new Moses with a new Decalogue. Officials who have flouted the ancient Commandments are not likely to honor modern ones. The American government brings good results only when
all Americans accept their duty to oversee it. » » r : . THIS means more than writing Jetters to the editor, It means a public search for ideas from which the government can draw effective polcies. It means energetic backing of a series of laws that can transform the federal government from a house of temptation into a sound instrument for adapting the American tradition of justice to the facts of life in the middle of the Twentieth Century. It means active political participation on every level, especially, on the level of party organization. There is no assurance that a Republican National Chairman would behave any differently from ex-Demo-cratic Chairman “Boyle if he had the chance, Both parties will turn to such men as long as the ordinary citizens of this land are too indifferent to inform themselves about government, too lazy to vote unless a ward heeler calls for them in a:limousine, too smug. to. participate in party primaries, too foolish to see through meaningless slogans. Cy ys =” » » THE greatness of a democratic nation lies in its powers of regeneration, No despot bars the way to
By DON TEVERBAUGH Times Real Estate Editor
Looking at the displays in the 27th annual Home Show and the “House for Moderns” is pretty much like peering to a crystal ball—you see the. future.
And you come away dissatis{fled with the present. That's {progress and you should feel this way. There would be little point in going if you didn’t see new things. But you will see them. If you have intentions of taking in the Home Show there's only today and tomorrow left, you know. Don't miss it, it's worth seeing.
Glamour for Walls
There's a big new trend for the walls of your home. You can see it at the show booths. The Burnet-Binford exhibit tells the story-—well, at least a part of it—wood. panels. Home owners like ‘eth. This year probably will be a record era for interior wood paneling. They come in several different woods with natural grain finishes and they're easy to install.
You can do it yourself if you're
board. It knocks maintenance
tractive finish built-in. ferent wood grain finishes and 14
fabric designs. All you do is cut it to size with & saw, cover the back with ad-
old wall. or chip. You can see it at the Stackhouse Building Specialties booth,
62d IFC Convention Opens Wednesday In vod] Hotel
OOSIER clubwomen will be getting their own hotises ;
in order this week end in anticipation of a trek to the Capital next week for the 62d annual convention of the Indiana ‘Federation of Clubs.
Mrs. Claude S. Steele, Knox, president, will open convention after the. 9 a. m. registration Wednesday in the Claypool Hotel. Dr. Alfred P. Haake, Park Ridge, Ill, mayor, will give the address at the noon luncheon honoring distfict presidents. The afternoon program will be - devoted to a panel, symposium
and workshop. n 8
” THE 6:30 2. HM. dinner in the Riley Room will feature a talk by Mrs. Oscar A. Ahigren, Whiting, ‘General Federation of Women’s Club first vice president. Her subject will be “In the Big Things We Are as One.” Honor guests will be past state “presidents. and officers.
Butler Represented At Women's Parley
Three Butler University representatives are attending the regional intercollegiate Association of Women Students. convening in Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa. The convention closes today. In the local group are Mrs. Elizabeth W. Durflinger, dean of women; Miss Norma Stultz and Miss Katherine Nitchman, students.
Guild Units to Meet The following units of the White Cross Guild will meet next week in the Methodist Hospital Service Center: Monday—Meridian Street Methodist and. Wallace Street Presbyterian; Thursday—Music, Broad Ripple and Self Third; Friday —8un Pae, Cheerful and Third Christian.
® .
Robert Yoho, State Health Board, will be moderator for the Thursday morning health panel. Taking part will be Dr, L. E. Burney, «State Health Board secretary; Dr. Kenneth G. Kohlsteadt, Indiana Heart Foundation, and Dr. Philip B. Reed, Indiana Mental Health Association. Both the Fine Arts Department and Epsilon Sigma Omicron Sorority will hold special luncheons at 12:30 p. m. ” » » “FEDERATION and Its Values” will be discussed by Mrs. Hiram C. Houghton, Red Oak, Iowa, GFWC president, in the afternoon. Mrs. Houghton also will be dinner speaker that night. She will talk on “Building Bridges of Friendship.”
Friday morning's business session will be devoted to speclal committee reports. Dr. Robert B. Stewart, Purdue University vice president and treasurer, will also speak on “Women and Economic Security.”
“Vehicles for Democracy” will be Donald Bruce's topic at the 12:30 legislative luncheon. After election polls close at 2715 p. m. delegates wil hear Mrs. Marjorie P. Husted, Minneapolis, discuss “Do You Want More Recognition?” Awards in. the “Build Freedom with Youth’ contest will be announced at the Friday night 6 o'clock dinner. Speaker will be Dr. Allan A. Stockdale, New York, National Association of Manufacturers, on “Meeting the Modern Challenge.” Officerselect will, be presented.
handy with a hammer and nail. Another big thing in wall coverings is plastic sheathed fiber for a loop and comes with an atYou get your choice of six dif-
modern colors in marbelized and
hesive and slap it up over your It's tough—won't peel
Only Two More Days To Attend Home Show
Plastic Panels Getting frequent appreciative noises from the women {is the Stewart-Carey Glass Co. display of Corrulux. That's the ..ew corrugated plastic panel you'll see in the bathroom of the “Home for Moderns.” It has lots of uses inside and! outside the home, It looks fragile but it's shatterproof. Rocks and hailstones bounce off. Many architects are Including the new product in home designs, using it for skylights, room partitions, ceilings, shower stalls, car ports, porch glazing, garden walls and canopies and awnings. It comes in six bold colors and numerous paler shades.
Arabian Awnings Aluminum awnings are getting a big play from the Home Show fans, too, Especially at the Kool Vent Co. display. They have their exhibit set up to show you just what their awnings will look like on your house. And they've done a good job of it. The Arabian type with spearlike posts is popular. Their factory roller-coating enameling process gives them different colors on the top or underneath side of the awning, if desired, Bob Burke of the firm explained to me. The Kool Vent awning is so named because it is completely ventilated and prevents hot air pockets outside your window on muggy summer afternoons. And that means a difference of 10 to 20 degrees on the inside. They have just about every color imaginable and the finish compares with that of an automobile—it's four layers of baked
“wrong into right.
{The Rev, (John Lynch,
A .
change and improvement here. The people in themselves can turn glodm into brightness and They can banislt government for the greedy if they seriously espouse the jdeas that are essential in a government for the decent. They have but to carry out their duty to themselves and insist - that the managers of their government look to all of them for guidance. Evil already is rotting the
principles we live by, but it is |
not too late for American citizens to crush the evil, rescue the principles, and save their country,
(Con EN 1052. hy Blair Rolies) END OF SERIES )
Announce Shift In Pastorates
~The Rev. Fr. Ambrose Sullivan has resigned as pastor of Holy Cross Catholic Church and will go tn Tucson, Ariz, to live, The. Rev. Fr. Denis Spalding, pastor of the Immaculate Conception Church, Aurora, will sueceed Father Sullivan here, Fr.
pastor of 8t, Martin's, Siberia, will become pastor at Aurora.. The Rev. Fr.
Fr. Sullivan
become effective May 12. Father: Sullivan,
of Holy Rosary Church, served
War II. His parishioners and
- THE INDIAN APOLLIS TIMES
[Uncle Beckons
nounced late yesterday that the
{to 31,000 in July.
Edward Finnerty, assistant pastor of Assumption Church, Indianapolis, 'will assume the church in Siberia. All three changes will
a Pennsylvania native, and former pastor
as an Army chaplain in ‘World
31,000 In July
ore Draft Call Set at 10,000; ok
By Pnited Press WASHINGTON, Apr. 26-Th
to be discharged this summer. | The Defense Department an-
Army would draft 10,000 men in
ber will be about the same as in
July, the announcement said, |
The sharp increase in the July| draft quota reflected warnings of, defense officials that the Army. would have an’ “unusually large” personnel turnover this summer
become eligible for release, Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Army chief of staff, has indicated that more than 60,000 men a month would be released from service starting July 1. The ‘size of the July draft call indicated that the Army expects enlistments to supply about half its manpower needs. The April and May calls were for 19,000 each month, the smallest since last June, when 13,000 men were inducted. The Marine Corps draft call for J
August that the Marines have been able to meet thelr manpower needs without resorting to the draft.
Psychologist Quits At Manual High
A Manual High School psychologist has resigned as school officials prepared to cancel his con-
priest with a reception Sunday, May 11, in Fatima Hall,
‘DePauw Botanist To Visit Tonga Islands
Times State Service GREENCASTLE, Apr. Seven months in the South Pacific studying the plant life of the
DePauw University.
two research grants
genheim fellowship,
tionay Science Foundation.
summers in Central America.
Where to Go
Indianapolis Home Show. Manufacturers Building, State Fair Grounds. Daily from 11 a. m. to 10:30 p. m. General admission, 50c. Indiana Roof presents Toby
Davison and his orchestra. $1.20 per person. 8 p. m. “Meet Arizona.” Catholie
diana University Building, State Fair Grounds. $1.20 and $1.80. 8:30 p. m. “Murder in the Cathedral” Presented by Indiana Univer
enamel. The awnings come fac-
urday night. Mrs. Kiley is arranging birds of paradise in pink cages.
sity Theater. IU Theater,
tory installed. No work for you. Bloomington. 8:30 p. m,
friends will honor the departing
lit was not planned to renew the
26 —
Tonga Islands is on schedule next year for Dr. Truman G. Yuncker,
The trek will be financed by recently awarded Dr. Yuncker, head of the department of botany and bacteriology. The latest was a Gugsupplement. ing an earlier grant from the Na-
Dr. Yuncker previously spent
two years on botanical research in the South Pacific and three
Theater Guild presentation, In-
{tract at the end of the. school
| year, Supt. Herman IL. Shibler said contract of C. A, Schorr, psychologist hired last year for child behavior studies, because of “unsatisfactory work.” Mr. Schorr submitted his resignation yesterday afternoon. Dr. Shibler said he had received complaints from principals and teachers about the psychologist's work and added Mr. Schorr had been “having trouble with everybody.” The superintendent declared Mr. Schorr had tried to have the head of the school social services department fired soon after the psychologist took his job with the school system. Mr, Schorr complained the program “lacked orientation for per. sonnel” and that ‘“co-ordinat‘on and integration of various rvices” also was lacking.
thrift's
ad no; and July,! marking the first time since last
Hoosier Profile By David Watson
EVERYBODY likes to spend money. . Harry C. Anderson is no exception. And he : gets paid to spend other people's dough. On the surface that would sound like a spend‘Utopia. But Harry Anderson can tell you it's not all peaches and cream,
n iron-clad budget,
When you are bound by
[the pennies must be watch: hel lateha them > jhe Indianapolis Public School Army has upped its July draft! ystem, where he has been purchasing agent for call to 31,000 to replace men due the last 22 years. In that time he has spent money for every{thing the schools need, including the proverbial “soup to nuts”
He has seen a lot of changes in the school June, and then boost inductionsigystem. He has been most amazed by the sweepThe Army’siing growth of the school budget. When he started draft calls in August and Septem- work at 150 N. Meridiah St. in 1930, our schools
were being run on a budget of $5 Mr, Anderson said.
The last one was pushing the $20 million
mark, * * »
DURING his career he has administered the as drafted men and volunteers oath of office to three superintendents of Indian|apolis schools, and would probably have had a record of four had he been available when Dr, Herman L. S8hibler went on the job,
Many School Board members, serving overs
have officially launched their careers in public office after taking the oath from
lapping terms, Harry Anderson.
twinkling as he chuckled, perhaps job he holds,
he spent many days on the road for brokerage firms,
drummer in the territories, and a
* ©¢
in on Thursday,” the agent explal confused at the first of the wee and on the road. until Tuesday.
plete his week out of town. The stock market crash of
As towels.”
“That is spelled An-d-e-r-8-0-n," he reminds. “It's Seots,” he said, and his eyes started
of his ancestral background and the spending
Mr. Anderson is a native of Marion County, Center Township, and for all his 70 years has called Indianapolis home, But in his earlier years
In those days every salesman knew every other
be spotted by the luggage he carried,
MR. ANDERSON tells of the good-natured ‘ribbing new men used to take when they first appeared. The old-timers called them T&T men. That meant they were “out on Tuesday and
Tradition had it that a new man was usually
all day Monday trying to get out of the house Therefore, he seldom got away
Then, being new, he usually got homesick and returned home on Thursday, rather than com-
Anderson to leave the brokerage business, but after he went “inside” for the school office Mr, Anderson applied the “T&T" term to himself. purchasing agent, he said, he was responsible for everything from
“
Mr, Anderson
million a year, :
HARRY C. strings.
at the thought
Times shots by Dens Timmerman | ANDERSON—Hoids the purse
MR. ANDERSON Is one agent who does not believe in turning a deaf ear to a salesman. “Hvery salesman has a story to tell,” he said, and recalls the days¥ghen he worked on the other side of the client iy
“I was always gra eful when a prospect lise
as a salesman
new man could mittee, and had
School Board.
As a notary, verify the signatures.
ned. in Arcadia, Cal, k, so he spent His wife, the
tened to what 1 had to say,” Mr. Anderson stated. He still remembers the time he made a $100,~ 000 sale on the first attempt. The agent first came in contact with the system while employed by Thomas C, Day & Mr. Day was active in the school Citizens’ Come-
han
obtained many signatures of tax-
payers who wanted a woman member on the
Mr, Anderson was called on to ¢ $ o
HE HAS another important connection with schools, but not in Indianapolis. His daughter, Mrs. Glibert B, Stuckey, is a fourth/grade teacher
She attended Butler University
and was graduated from DePauw University,
former Miss Cora Mann, attended
Manual High School,
In buying, as well as selling, Mr, Anderson
points out, one must have a love for people. His wide range of friends in the business world points
up the fact that he lives by that
'20 forced Mr,
It overflows into his private life, ed
He 1s active in church work, membet of the board of North Methodist Ch: nT the Loggia Committes of the church, : He is a 33d Degres Mason, and pat “tractors tb der-in-Chief of the Indiana Consisto : Rite. He is also a member of the Bn
Few U. S. Fliers Balk in Korea °
SEOUL, Korea, Apr. 26 (UP)— Gen. Frank F, Everest said today that a “very small percentage” of American airmen in. Korea have expressed a fear of flying in the past six months, but none has refused orders to go up.
The 5th Air Force commander was commenting onthe refusal
Mr, Schorr contended .is position had become one ’/ . on the outside loo.ng In”
although he had been “hired to do a job.”
Open to Oil Hunters QUEBEC CITY, Que. Apr. 26 (UP)—Canada's Gaspe Peninsula was opened today to oil prospecting. Quebec Premier Maurice Duplessis said the Department of Mines had been authorized to issue prospecting and exploration permits “to uncover the possibilities of exploiting commercially the oll known to be in the undersoil of the peninsula.”
Times nhoto by William A. Oates Jr.
DECORATORS AT WORK—Mrs. W. F. Kiley, club manager George J. Hindley and Mrs. H. S. Bowden (left to right) decorate a tree for the Highland Country Club spring formal dinner dance Sat-
Mr. Hindley is spraying
gardenias blue while Mrs. Bowden ties them to the tree.
Informal Tea Set
An informal tea at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow will be given by the Alpha Chapter, Rho Delta Sorority: in the home of Mrs. Thomas Joyce, 64 N, Devon St. An accordion duet by” Judith Loeper and George Bnodgrass » will be included on the program. Honored guests will include Mesdames James Babcock, JohnDoyle, Rosemarv Hauck, John
Murphy, Edward Worland and Robert Wurtz, Miss Jerl Wy"song and Miss Jo Ann Forestal, Arrangements have been made by Mesdames W Jacobs,
Tomorrow
Thelma South, William Federle, Ernest Laswell and George Cafouros.
After Divorce —What?
“I was a fool to give up . . ." That's what Eliza discovered after her divorce. She tells WHY she was a “fool” in a new series which starts Monday in ‘The Times:
‘FOR BETTER OR WORSE’ The Dangers of Divorce » Told by Divorced People 4
Rev. G. G. Kimsey To Show Films
Sigma Beta Chapter, Pi Omicron National Sorority will pre‘sent a talk and pictures by the Rev. George G. Kimsey, pastor of the Memorial Baptist Church,
at 8 p. m. Monday in the Women's Department Club, The program will be based on Rev. Kimsey's trip to Greece last summer with three city pastors who escorted a shipload of livestock and canned goods donated by the Evangelical and Reformed Church and Brethren Service Committee to the war stricken.
-a
of 13 Reservists in Texas to fly because of “family situation and hardship.” Gen. Everest said the cases of airmen in Korea who expressed a fear of flying were referred to flying evaluation boards to decide whether the men were suffering from temporary combat fatigue or shamming. Medical officers ‘advise the boards, he sald, and in cases where there appears to be only an attempt to avoid combat duty the men “are not relieved from
‘Birth of a Nation’ Banned in Boston
BOSTON, Apr. 26 (UP)-—After mote than 30 years of successful recurrent runs in theaters throughout the world, the epic silent film, “Birth of a Nation,"
Grimth's masterpiece In its place, “Charlie the Circus” was shown.
Named Superintendent Of Beatty Hospliel
The Indian tal Health Coupcil today unced the appointment of Dr. W. R, Vanden Bosch as superintendent of the Norman 'M. Beatty Memorial Hospital at Westville. He served as acting superintendent after the death of Dr, Herbert McMahan, who died in
flying duty.”
Bridge Talk—
a hospital fire at Topeka, Kas.
Miami Valley Tourney Scheduled May 16 to 18
THE annual Miami Valley be played May 16 throu
Bridge Championships will
gh 18 in the Miami Hotel,
Dayton, O. Local members of the out-of-town committee include Mrs. M. L. Thompson, Easley Blackwood,
Ralph Ittenbach and M. Stanley McComas. Results of play are announced by local clubs, Winners follow: Holy Cross Club, monthly mas-
ter point game, Wed. night: N
& 8 (Possible Score 180)—Mr. and Mrs. Homer H. Relgner, 113.5; Mrs. J. C. Stafford, Mrs. Waring Lynch, 108; Mrs, Fred Finkbinier, Frank Daugherty, 100.5; E & W (Possible 168) Miss Statia O'Connell, Mrs. Loretta Newton 100.5; Mr. and Mrs. Rod P, Hughes, 99.5; Mrs. A. J. Lauth, Dr. R, L. Bosler, 93. The next regular play will be at 7:30 p, m. May 14 in Holy Cross Hall.
y » » INDIANA BELL Club, master
Duplicate point game,
We, the Women— Do You Fit the
Definition of a
Howell movement, Wed. night; (Possible Bcore 84) — John (tuedel, H. D. Eberhart, 55.5; H. R. Milburn, R. O. Hickman 53; William Hartley, Herb Allen, 41.5; A. E. 8mith, 8. D. Stroud. 40. The group will meet again at 6:15 p. m. May 7 in the Administration Building. Men's Club, Mon. night: N & 8 (Possible Bcore 286)—Harold .D. Milburn, Allan H, Warne, 195.5; Warren B. Pattison, C. H. Rowe, 174; John 8. Lynn, Lawrence J, Welch, 165.5; E & W (Possible 264)—E. R. McDaniel, O. K, Frausten, 153.5; Gordon Thompson, M. Steele Churchman, 151; Lawrence B. MeArthur, Albany, N. Y., John F. Gansman, 150.5.
Cynical Wife?
By RUTH MILLETT EFINITION of a wife: “A woman who once thought a certain man was perfect.”
Judging from my mail, t
he wit—or maybe he was a
philosopher—who thought up that definition hit the nail
squarely on the head. Wives do seem more interested In their husbands’ faults
than in their good qualities. That isn't true before marriage. Before marriage a girl dwells on all the good qualities of the man she loves. She thinks about his good qualities, enumerates them when she is talking about him to her parents and her friends. One of her most fascinating topics of conversation, so far as the man she is in love with is concerned, could be summed up under the heading, “What I ike about you fs. . . th ~
IT IS A SAD ay for the
Ruth Millett
bappiness of a marriage wien
a woman changes from the “what-I-like-about-you” attitude to the “the-trouble-with-you-is” approach.
80 how about you? If you've been married longer than a year it might be well to check up on your own attitude.
Named to National Legion Auxiliary Post
Miss Jeanette Houston has been appointed assistant national secretary of the American Legion Auxiliary by Mrs. E. A. Campbell, national president. Miss Houston will succeed Mrs. Sadie V. Thomas, Chicago, Thursday, who Pesigned to enter business. The new. secretary, formerly of Shelbyville, has been a secretary to the national president for the past five years.
Gary Commends Steel Seizure
Naming Stirs Memories
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT NEW YORK, Apr, 26—In the last few days New York state has chosen a “favorite son” for the Democratic presidential campaign. The Democratic leaders made the decision to ny to win for Averell Harriman the nomingtion in the Democratic natione al convention. I have known this ©°= “favorite son” since he was a small boy. He was a friend of my brother, and my husband and 1 took the youngsters camping when they were in their teens. Ever since he has been in public life, both my husband and I watched with interest his development. My husband felt that he was a real liberal and a fine man whom he trusted. » - » THERE ARE MANY candldates in the Democratic Party, The field seems to be wide open, awaiting a decision at the convention. I take no active part in poli tics, but I shall watch with ine terest all of the active candidates and hope with all my heart that the Democratic Party will unite behind the man who. has courage and strength to live up to the highest ideals of our democracy and to demand- high standapds of those about him, I hope that the nominee who emerges as the candidate of ours convention will have the capacity and the imagination not only to understand the needs of our own great country, but . to see those needs in relation ship to our position in the . world.
Sorority to Dance The national convention of Phi Deita Pi Sorority today Hotel wilt Molise a dana wo. of a dance night in the Marble Room and na
