Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1952 — Page 16
DEARBOSS... By Dan Kidney pe Ek Jenner Explains rioosier Group
SUNDA Washi
Hai
The Indianapolis Times
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‘Backed Principle, Stuck to If’
CHICAGO, July 12—8en. William E. Jenner (R. Ind.) sald he was going back to Bedford and rest up. He denied that he felt “done-in” by the nomination of Dwight Eisenhower, He offered no particular comment on the outcome, He did point out that the Hoosier delegation was dedicated® to a principle and they stuck to it. That was that Sen, Robert A. Taft
on them, He contends that he is a “nationalist” and believes that Hoosier Republicans are also, The convention speaker rar brought the greatest response from the junior Senator from Indiana was Gen. Douglas MacArthur. He sat in his delegate seat and his eyes brightened
on administration failures,
with each verbal bombardment by the General.
Bel Firs
By 1
. otk ri te
bial
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daily and y $10.00 a vear. ; gui $3.00; oli ‘ther Wats US nossessions Canada and had sen the right to lead the Republicans Telephone PL aza 5551 . That principle caused them to be on the Nearest Senator's Dream WASE : osing side of every roll call, includ the last, ANOTHER CONVENTION hero of Sen, Glos Ligh and he Reape Wet Find Thelr Qu Way when Hs as muminsted Jt Ko) first Jenner's was former President Herbert Hoover, . Thele a on the presidency. There been times perhaps hi \ox Of ) : will get th - . when they could have switched, with con id : 8 program 0 f-contained defense h Probl / able profit to themselves in the political futures. were Atares; 10 the Semathv's own dream. Inside The German Problem They stuck it out although a second ballot tne delegates to et is Wi Md he Got tion Senat HE UNITED STATES, France and Britain have sent a might have split off some of the 30 Taft votes. the greatest hand in all of his appearances of Minnes “note to the Soviet Union, agreeing to a four-power meet- Left for Europe betors his fellow Republicans. - swung intg “ing. provided it is limited to the selection of an impartial WHEN THE PRESIDENTIAL roll call came, ep. Charles A. Halleck, who was shut. out word from ng, prov to study th sibilities of holdin By elec. Sen. Jenner was the delegation leader. Senior (rom being a. delegate by the organization Penns commission to study the poss 0 g Sen. Homer E. Capehart had taken off for ‘!ime-limit rule was the closest to Mr. Hoover, : tions throughout Germany. New York and a trip to Europe. State Chairman _ however, On the night Mr. Hoover made the was at the The Allied proposal is designed to test the sincerity Cale Holder was the delegation chairman. Soren on spgech, he invited Mr. Halleck to sit chairman : : ini Mr, Holder had been put in the chairmanship m until he was called to the platform. of the Russian claim that they are prepared to join the as an almost politically unknown by the Jenner “I have the utmost reverence and respect Ina} Trini Western Powers in opening the way for a united, inde- organigation back in 1948, He never had [Of President Hoover” Mr. Halleck said. “I that a Pen pendent Germany. : deviated from the Jenner policies. So the “never- four higuly flattered and pleased by his invi- strongly tc gs « » . . Too much should not be expected of these negotiations, it it thing ay Ee ean * ; better can at this stage in their proceedings. The Soviet idea of what a A verimes 7 politica) defeat. «No Harm fo Halleck This d constitutes a free election is far different from our own. mediate the matter of running on a foreign ata TART etent Qos do hur Halleck Doesn't mq The same is true of a “united, independent Germany.” The De atm Hn ay hig eagtuas hower wins he is almost certain to Senge He'll proba Kremlin, for example, pretends that Poland, Hungary and termed an “internationalist candidate.” y JOriLy leader in the House, as he was in the the record Czechoslovakia are free, independent states. There are, of course, things in the GOP ep ican Congress, = his vote. hm. Had He platform adopted by the Chicago convention toh. Richard Nixon (R. Cal.), the vice presi. Does mear HOWEVER, our Allies insisted upon one more meeting that sound almost like “Jennerisms.” These ay pane, I, al SPects Sievenoon with the Soviets, before proceeding with plans for rearming A x haragrapie Daag he Truman sain speaker again. Mr. Halleck's closest re Tu. hy : Western Germany, and our government felt compelled to in foreign fields including those initiated under for He eadenship Inst ume was Rep. Clarence pered it wa compromise with that viewpoint. = what was then termed the Vandenberg biparti- managers. So maybe i 3 one 9 hs Taft despite his : Now it is up to Moscow to prove that it actually desires San policy. did their senior statesman a servi i r= ; Sen. Jenner. was a pioneer in such accusa- kept him from joining t bs when they They're t. a settlement of the Gérman problem. For obviously if an tions. He is likely to continue to bear down hard left sitting on his hoods Seron and being Manon tila agreement cannot be reached for free elections to establish 8 Chicago an independent German government, the settlement of » . 4 3 He's expec other questions relating to Germany would appear most STATE POLITICS ss. By Irving Leibowit mt labor suppo: unlikely. i . Hf y ° : 2 could get. / J » There is a well-grounded suspicion that Russia has ’ ? ere S i e Story Be hi nd Indiana’s cause. of hi asked for another Big-Four meeting for no other reason than CONVE NTION By F : : (o New Deal a: ] . +. By Frederick C. Othman ° . . > to further delay Western Germany's rearmament. If that- wr : rganization or Eis I te South re becomes apparent as the negotiations proceed, perhaps our Th e Ch e 1% ’ T ! Li . en ower Harriman i wishful thinking Allies will then agree to go ahead with ers, IKe s lears, Linger GOHICACO, July 12—Should Slowly, Mr. Brown gathered = Bruce Savage, joined the cru- Sil be atta + . § : i . 0 ™ the original program. If the Soviets can upset the Allied * ° . ® to give full credit to the poli- ticians who oe f Sip sade, : Ld : 3 afarid .to Cc timetable whenever they choose, simply by asking for mi (o | in Ec oes in Em t 4 all tician who was responsible for speak. out in public for Gen. 4 Clerk Brown, using LAN HOU] another meeting, we'll never get anywhere. ] Pp Y Presenting im With two Of EEE Owe comma 2a oma wage, Ju 2 — Tre a reception like this. That was dress was not so much the ee Bore in job, — ei oh Tina army and sent it nto battle, sneaked int y, the way me. well-turned phrase and the la. er, a state He came senhower Speed Is Main Killer a ee: ‘wn LooRES FINE, 1 5, Lamon, Wt 2 a a a Ne oa Manon old. me protests es es length. He spoke f . , Xee- - J_OOKING for the cause of 326 traffic fatalities in the fet and contemplate calmly thought in a fresh peeled: har En Hoosier Fisenhowe: 'Workirs ive and James Gregory. cur- By he rs and & turer . ose amazing Republicans. onion haircut, and one of those That broke th . or of Rough Notes, 0 8 nation during the Fourth of July week end, a new No life in 'em? Haw. ” blue shirts that have become -. OTE Poe 3 this es Add 16 top level leaders to . an Insurance trade magazine, primary astounded [e_ Pros aaa ha record for a three-day holiday on that date, speed must Even as I write this in the uniforms for politicians since lar conclave and the Republi Cire is CO DoEn And . "a ply aq tis Eisen Se rank high. Conrad Hilton Hotel, they're the TV moguls told ‘em blue cans, who'd sat throngh pra see that this was a high MEANWHILE, in New York bind of i on a = ona or : cheering Ike and his Mamie photographed, white, while week of some poFeted Jolitical army. and elsewh contested dels. POD ? i , of the dul : sewhere, a group of T Combined with overcrowded highways: 3 comparative. ont alle In he back witlte Jooked dirty. > palaver yet, appreciated vest a, Le 9 006 Sonera) fespon- headed by Paul 5 Agi oy ey han ntion, pr ig ll . large number of inexperienced drivers out for a ho nh the ehind him sat his Mamie, 2 » = " gan putting on the beat : Bot ‘weather and short teny 1 does Ys freight elevators—grim-faced looking proud, and you can't SOME OF them even haq 0lana delegates to the Eisen- touches to the national Reins for or) he ou Zur Jolitieps Tory Seam. 0 pers, speed can and does rank little men in coveralls are blame her for that. She mad tears in their eyes when Ike POWSr bandwagon? OT Was ower campaign started by With pretty girls, some of thers Shagrined high on the list of traffic killers. Shoveling ot the literature, on a white hat, and I don’t reached that part about his thers = Lharpshocting 55 Sen. James Duff, Sen John voting Ton ie of Them id Pat Dn Sa the crumpled orchids, and the y __ dedicati = Cabot . ) ime, ; "This point i given weight by what happened the First umaise or Sigmomis in cans Coie einen sone Lh eo tomer. Bu Grn LTH the tw Gegutes Engle Dowager tor TOE took num on day of the long week end on two of the country's best-known cups from the headquarters of clean. But I hear tell she's a He'd wept a little, himself, handeye "8 Now, a flock of H ral- of SAME ths sound and When Te 8 ways, the New Jersey Turnpike and the Bob, Earl, Mac and Harold. smart lady and I have no When he learned the folks had HERE ARE THE facts on Hed around the ie hid It front-paged the Wy »- ph 1: hi = vanig"T RE TaN Ty 4 rr ® doubt she will buy for cam. handed the job to him. Gen. Eisenhower's army from _COI0TS. There was Elmer (Lit=- campaign and lambasted too hard 5 : = PM SITTING here in a kind paigning purposes “soon a hat Then the delegates filed into the banks of the Wabash tle Doc) Sherwood, who helped Taft wing of Dissid ‘the ee On the eight-month-old New Jersey super-highway, of dam, myst eit my e228 of palest, purest blue. Halstead Street, where it’ was It was activated almost a [roms formes Ku Klux Klan diana. rr rn I wos “Hell” sal 3 i 0 ® 8 =» ; ot and smelly from the pack- ry Robert Lyo! . #” where the speed limit is 60 miles per hur, a heavy trailer- palace at the stockyards, and . IKE'S SPEECH struck me ing plants. The a a Dale yo a i Republican National nar ; pers cried, almost dally. uve, “I dor truck rammed into three automobiles parked at the side of my GYe ung Jom he as a little Eem-windes and I over, and while the conven- political career for daring to téeeman some years ago. Lo that rs 3 9 wn industrialist, wan hots | the road. Five persons, including a 3-year-old boy, were hour and i) ao rar Buen mavhe J Sualily an tioneers didn’t actually have suggest that the Republicans Ernest Lee, an official of the bandwagon, Jom pa os tha IT TOOK vi . y; at least I stars in their eyes, I can tes- select not a professional from . Morris Plan Bank in Indian- men state, With sirens burned to death in the flaming wrgckage. ! e Sled got a busted hand, hear more of it year in and - tify I heard not one of them the ranks, but an outsider who 2Polis and a former aid to Gen ar a pore Columbus police statio ® = @ s 8 = rom being stepped on by a year out in Washington than. complain about the heat "capt Eisenho , were route, 1000 f LATER in the day another crash on the turnpike cost lady in pink, high - heeled most. The beauty of his ad- or even the ne ; Soula sapture the imagination his old on Jegan Working tor outing She Jk campaign. sar polies o two more lives, They raised to 25 the number of deaths on peacefull The Indiana Ike cam ang eye-on.. the pro. and his 15Cr - ib fully I was contem- P Was Eisenhower newspape - Con the 118-mile highway since it was opened last January. patng Repybiisana from Seat 8 tr teen ens ets ran errs anne nutes aniIINNIIIIIIIIINNIneII eaReRS faking sh iiiam publisher of in gy Charles inti Se 20 mh ’ , Row P, Section 4 of the ¢ : ared himself pub But the speedways weren't yet through for the day. Press box ‘When a Hora footed 5 ; > : ine Star and News enlisted and Gen. i, ibuely for the trip ... On the Pennsylvania Turnpike five persons were killed in a a sour note (you'd have been } 00 sier Fo ru m—‘G ok WwW k’ Hata ere tire welght of his switch. When he came home a two-car crash. pervory too, had you been the 3 00 or Bewapapers inte We Sause, from 2 Jurops: he told newsmen an Arf ans : : ugler) and in strode Ike and : ormer eo General’ on: ~ The New Jersey Turnpike is a modern miracle of wind« Mamie from the other end of : "I do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend : uns American Legion national Was with NATO, als SY ides was ih ing concrete—wide, sweeping curves, no cross traffic, no the vast hall. i : %. wil defend to the death your right fo say it, ae George Cralg, The Kissnhower people To k . Treveranasnncnsenann on ASSENT . on e Ike bandwa, lanned to : towns to go through, no nothing much except sit. there and Ea hy : ’ . He w go». 3 De a Mr, Brown celebrating. hold onto the wheel and zoom slong at 60. wa ACING BACKWARDS a YE Sw congratulated for taking such an interest in for be was sg i ~ in honor of the. work ne This sounds fine and it is for a while. Then the whole [8 Jes 0% ihe Press, the radio mypneq about Muscular Pistrophy, mapas EE Tray fawn Ne The right Juan SOP omtnation for governor they did in big os Sutside Zina 3 A : an » their lamps, their . : i e realized mos BE thing gets to be a little monotonous. And that's where a lot walkie - talkies ana toes the only children we had {two boys) with this —Frank Kelley, 2038 N. Tacoma Ave. favored Sen. Taft. kt Hoosiers ig beachhead in Ine by = bottle t of the turnpike trouble apparently comes from. cameras, trying to get for pos- dreaded disease we read the article with a warm 1 Idti 2 8 This fell through. Mr. Pul. Tost xway. The senses lose some of their edge, lulled by the steady Lory very blink and nervous feeling in our hearts for you for making known est Oldtimers SO HUGE ‘was the Tke lam made a deal with the old Changes ’ i J smile of the newly nominated to the public the actual t MR. EDITOR: movement in Indi - James Bradford-He , p ruth about it. 0 ana now nry Ostrom smooth pace and the motor’s hum. The reactions seem to presidential nominee and his This has come too late to help NE children I think one of the greatest attributes to the there was need for a state di. Political machine, mostly com- sicEISEN . g miss the frequent test of dealing with cross traffic, turns, aly, A Mighty roar turned put having had to sit by and watch our own Prevention of traffic jams, accidents and deaths rector and Robert Grant, a B0%ed of Taft supporters, and Toa starts and stops. Ln ava ance © cise; ll: slowly*die over a period of 20 years, knowing ~ WOU bé 3 compulsory re-examination of all former Congressman from yohnd UP as one of the na- an 3 . t 4 rivers a {] on ® = = 4 8 8 his Mh TE a nothing" was being done toward a cure, I made ari past the sge-ef 45, Soh Bene got the job. ea gates A a Bemators. ALSO the driver is inclined to lose sight of the fact from the top balcony. And sud- [YS¢!f @ promise several years ago that if ever In all my experience of driving, every time Teen. assistant 10 Pal puion eadens tL 10d Ike's prin hat he is traveling fast. So wh i denly I oy en ted = an organization was started and I could be of there are screwball antics of the road-I find it's Hoffman, was imported from ot ager. Senate is apt that he is traveling fast. when an emergency does arise, ing help I surely would. That is why we att old fuddy-duddies who have lost the sense of re- als Church, Va, to get the 0% Weary and brain weary Those Republicans swarmed y we attended —30 I Lodge of M when a car cuts sharply in front of him, or someone ahead iio tre Seu Ca So red the initial meeting of the Muscular Distrophy action, have dim eyesight, can’t hear or are just Hoosiels “on the ball” fort gana Sslegaies voted General's pr brakes to a sudden stop, his senses often are not up to cop. over ushers, stepping on fresh- Wednengay Svenieg: vr 0f themselves after all thelr’ years of Winton) Hime ro ie May S President and two a paign manag ing with the swiftness with which things happen, and acci- No Hon De Swmbling Weldon lover ie he eying han I'm sure if this were done about 50 per cent ttre Eisenhower supporters in a Fiseuhowss, Aris dd dents posalt: Bor pane Al PArOr \omselr” We found someons at that meeting of the cars on the road would Je on Hation County, like Harriet gor getting thy wi id hein of nsylva At high speed such accidents can be bigger killersithan fain goats from plank to plank J TARY of Jou DOV aid ote. SHEL. All four v4 Wa Oy Tom Bastrook ‘and, Indigney SENS. Hic al a : : . . at served as desks for the oys are afflicted with muscular distrophy. My : ordinarily—five killed in the Pennsylvania crash, five dead reporters. So there was this heart aches for every parent and child afficted Two New Stoplights % ane Mme in the New Jersey one. : lady in the fancy shoes. She wig Ue disqase and I hope through this MR. EDITOR: EUROPE soe By David M. Nichol Richard Nix By engineering standards, the turnpikes are marvels. Slepped on my good right paw, us the 30 some ne Phi and will be done The State Highway Commission spent over as Vice Pre But they don’t and they can't, take into full account human Weni Saraneh and maybe at viLms $2 million of the taxpayers’.money building a * ably be par ( ’ : you heard that scream about Joe Farrell was elected president of the by-pass around Lebanon in order to find two erman Cri o Kao teal, 180, behavior. The relationship of man and his machine can be he time Ike said he and the organization. Until Wednesday evening I had new locations for stoplights, » PS Eisenhowe! a satisfying and productive one up to a point, but the ma- issus never had experienced never seen nor heard of him. He is to be ; -—W. B. Iddings, Lebanon a nne e : * Ser cd chine steadily becomes stronger and faster and there comes : - r To t : : . Taft is pr a point beyond which man cannot follow it and remain the HOOSI ir R SKETCHBOO K : BONN, Germany, July 12— And even Sy ns S ; PO in master in control. By 0 Donnell Furvheatia have a standard © gseums, we don’t x r rot bf Policy C So some time along about now, man, the American Int A yap ms > $ tour="""bathing; beach.” SuppUrtars | automobile driver, is going to have to make up his mind oUnL. » & a vention cam hetier he’ inet if d : : They cluck to themselves N . him to give | whether he's going to sacrifice speed, or sacrifice himself. like,brooding hens. They shake IN RESTAURANTS, the Taft has | Hheip heads. If they feel they Srilor sys, Sroups x German the nomine ‘ now you 1 ye and women, was 1 The Bloody Tr vce’ may on ors EY often are noisy. They make Hons BR UST a year ago this week, the United Nations and the "You about - the way AmeHERH Waiter, and they wah hy begin. Jy : - . travelers id N18 8 ’ a Chinese and North Korean Communists began the so- ye ugh wn 88 f “they were on an Atrican he wants to called “truce” negotiations at Kaesong. a tourist buek. NY down au a President se : + ’ Ir After 12 months of bickering, grand-standing and de- a is only fair to report now Italy of Tor Task residents of Out of C ceit on the part of the Communists, and patience, tedious A Turgpeans © js feel She Stan slink away from favorite or 3 ‘ : other Euro- eating places after an | name argument and concessions on the part of the United Na- peans. Sometimes they express by their countrymen, The rer months, = W] tions, the negdtiations are about where they were at the it, but seldom as vigorously as porter quotes on tie cleared, 9 e German beginning. has 5 ig reporter in the businessman in Milan as say. vision of O : estdeutsche Allgemeine Zei- ~ Ing: been given « But the long talkathon, now moved to Panmunjom, has tung of Duesseldorf. ~ _ "Germans for the most part Ca it pot been gainful for either side in the casualty lists. $8 8. Nuiany Redsant Dbeople. The isin of In the 12 truce months alone, American forces have WRITING FROM Rome he tees Love had an urban fi ; . . , . h culture for ‘centuries.” eld to ea suffered 33,336 casualties, including 5023 killed in action. oh vmely hatch * =» enough atiot ‘ Bim : other So we have “bought” a year's time— at fearful cost. Germans in Italy.” He works THE REPORTER'S most Meanwhile The unanswered question is whether we have “bought” it himself into a savage pitch. Plistesing CARES AT9. rds "graphs inch in our own interests, or for the Communists, who have German girls, he says, have $30F tht small-town Ger Siltime high ' no regard for the Italian op Fre ressman who insists “leveling | used the year for a tremendous buildup of their ow forces. churches. They enter them, ou gram champagne in the Critical . : ’ sucker nightelubs—* Gerioli Hea Ove Te. Mans ean afford ro in"— REPORT Page Kip ing . ee 5 and then, when he is too plas- Army Engin THE COMMISSIONER GENERAL in calls “unnecessary flesh.” : yore of or lly another § gulp, ‘ten by Sen. Ele 3 moet oye without 3 dit, a a Br a rh + EY charg ner et. id compromise with ti ow . 0 row e The writer agrees not all eney, d : p tradition, however, guards, or to assume mocking- Germans behave as the proto- Engineers by wearing a black necktie. ly serious faces. He quotes types he has : pro million of In Korea, not too far to the north of Singapore, sol- one guide at the Cathedral of he admits sadly he has often given the A din Monreale in Sicily ’ Das tiers are attending artillery concerts without any. Sielly 23 mying = heard Talians say this Sym- em Ym ne int hai to an uppish Teutonic visitor: mer: : only ally der aly "Our churches are not mu- = “There they ‘are again, the another. T seums. They are éhurches. Germans” = gure ou L
