Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 July 1952 — Page 3
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THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1952 :
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Bill O'Dwyer Gets A Cold Reception For Using Profani
PAGE 3
Senors Don't Like Loss Of Dignity
By United Press
MEXICO CITY, July 31—Ambassador William O'Dwyer said today his controversy with United! Press Bureau Manager Robert Prescott over whether he intends to become a Mexican citizen was a “closed” case, The former New York mayor cursed Mr, Prescott in the pres-| ence of other American newsmen | and U. 8. officials Tuesday for, reporting ‘he hinted to friends he: might give up his U. 8. citizenship to practice law in Mexico, his “adopted” country. i Mr, O'Dwyer, at that tme, said he considered his U. 8. citizenship sacred and called Mr, Prescott a| “lar,” among other words, for filing the dispatch. ;
Ordered Out |
Mr. Prescott, who was ordered, out of the embassy by his for-| mer friend, said he had received the information from American Legionnaires and later had talked with Mr, O'Dwyer, who did not deny the report. . Mr. O'Dwyer said he now “considers the case closed,” but the, ambassador's vitriolic outburst against Mr. Prescott was still a live topic for conversation, Many Mexicans were surprised and shocked at Mr. O'Dwyer’s re-
action to the suggestion he might| a garden, .
BACK TO THE FARM—Engineer A. J. Bell, 3906 Forest Manor, climbed from the-diesel cab of the New York Central -Knickerbocker Special for the last time this morning to complete 45 years | propagandists. of railroading. Now, he plans to retire to a small farm and start |
Reds Twisted’
Grow's Writing
| By United Press | | WASHINGTON, July 31—Com'munist propagandists falsified {and twisted many of the militant | | “excerpts” they published from | [the diary of court-martialed Maj. | Gen. Robert W, Grow, the Army ~| has disclosed.
Gen. Grow never wrote such a! phrasé as “War. As soon as pos-| | sible. Now.” And his reported pre-! | dictions of American attack ac-| {tually referred to Russian inten-| {tions, the Army announced last| (night. | | Gen. Grow was convicted by. a | court martial Tuesday of record-| {ing classified information in al | personal diary while a U. 8. mili-| tary attache in Moscow and of] failing properly to safeguard it. He was given a reprimand and | temporarily suspended from command.
Gen. Grow’s diary was stolen and photographed without his knowledge while he was in Frankfurt, Germany. “Excerpts,” making it appear he advocated immediate war with the USSR, were [posisshea in East Germany and exploited widely by Russian
{
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3
Cite Quotations | The Army said, however, that
become ‘one of their countrymen.
‘many of the bellicose-sounding
Army Asserts I'm No Longer Rich,’
latively poor man who doesn't
iled Farouk Says
Egypt to abolish all titles but [know more than Ido,” he said) remain a monarchy, Page 30.) latter he, ex-Queen Narriman and By United Press [their 6-month-old spn; baby King ISLE OF CAPRI, Italy, July 31} { y ; J Ahmed Faud II, posed for photog-| (UP)—Ex-King Farouk of Egypt| hers P P € described himself today as a rel-|FaPRers. King Farouk shook off an] know where to: go. {early-morning toothache to meet | He said he would remain injthe press. A Capri doctor called, Capri “for the moment” until hejon him shortly after midnight decides: what to do but pointed{when he complained of pains. out that “I am no longer a rich| He told the newsmen: man” and that he and his family! “I am no longer a rich man
will “live very simply.” v 3 {and it is completely flase that I The only thing he knew def-|, i ont a fortune out of Egypt, Initely about his future plans, he jst as it is false that I have a said, is that “I will not go behind fortune hidden aboard the Iron Curtain.” i . * “Those who say I will go to ‘Live Simply’ America, to England, to Switzer- “My wife, my son and my
land, to the south of France, etc. qaughters will live very simply.
|
ym |I know that some may smile at | this. But you must consider that ‘anyone who finds himself with - {less than he used to have considvery poor, I know that I can still be envied but I hope that from SEOUL, Korea, July 3] King Farouk’s 25-room 14-bath-Lt.” Gen. Otto P. Weyland, room suite in the swank Eden B-29s scored “good to excellent” results in the biggest night raid
ers himself poor, Red Factory now on it can be envy without ) Paradiso Hotel at Anacapri was Far East Air Commander, of the Korean War last night on
guarded by a strong police detachment. He has rented three large sedans for his party and one of them was used to pick up Dr. Domenico Farace to treat Farouk's toothache.
“From the point of view of the By United Press |acrimony.” announced today American a factory only four miles from
King Farouk emphasized that
Some felt he had insulted Mexico, and others said they believed he had damaged his position as official representative here of the U. 8. “Mr. O’'Dwyer’s presence continues to be damaging to Mexi-can-American relations,” Carlos H, Solulas, a clothing store proprietor, said. “Countries are judged by the people who represent them. An ambassador should be one of the finest and cleanest people of his nation. I don’t know why President Truman keeps him here.” Teresa Corona, a secretary, said Mr. O'Dwyer “al¥vays has seemed like a gentleman to me, and a friend of Mexico. I'm sure what he said was not meant to be detracting to this country.” “Incredible” was the -word housewife Esperanza Bracamontes used. : : “I just can’t beliéve a man in the position of Mr. O'Dwyer would act in such a fashion,” she said. “I can't understand his insulting attitude toward Mexico.” “Out of Line” Sporting goods salesman Jose Moreno Y. Castanos said Mr. O'Dwyer was “very much out of line,” and Carl Migdail of New York, an American student, said it “Looks like Mr. O'Dwer completely lost his head.” Television film director Sar-
LONDON,
| i
Attlee Raps Bevan On Floor of Commons
By United Press
Juv 31 — Foeser of the Labor Party. Prime Minister Clement Attlee} : | Mr. Att] $ publicly rebuked leftwing rebel] I. Attlee rose in the House Aneurin Bevan today on the floor and accused the former health of the House of Commons in the| Minister of violating a confidence most open breach so far between|by revealing what went on in the
{Labor government while he was
the two contenders for leadership]
“excerpts,” used by the Russians to support “warmongering” charges against the United States, | never were written by Gen. Grow. They cited the following quotations attributed to him as complete Red fabrications which never appeared in the diary:
ONE—“Our attack should be directed at enemy weakness. Although the military services are primarily concerned with military| weapons and methods, we must, {understand that this war is total
war and is fought with all wea-
have been easily passed over into!g member. a real mess with his press con-, ; n | onservatives, overjoyed at the| ference,” Mr. Moreno said. \widening split in the opposition, Edward Lawson, an American cheered Mr. Attlee’s “personal exwho operates a photo store here,| na nation” on remarks Mr. Bevan
pons.” TWO—“We must learn that in
belt.”
sible. Now.”
said he was not surprised by Mr.| 4, yesterday in the economic
O'Dwyer’s denial of the Prescott]... Story. deny} ! Mr. Bevan yesterday said he in-| Mr. O'Dwyer has been eny i% sisted when the British rearmaa lot of things,” Mr. Lawson 8a'C./ ont program was launched in “That guy'd better deny eVery-i;oq, tnat Mr, Attlee affirm re-
thing he ever did.” {armament could be carried out|
ev Gloria Velasco : wi only to the extent that raw mate-| it . : _irials and machine tools were Who knows what sort of pres l avaiable.
sures the ambassador is working a | under?’ she asked “Maybe the! The Labor Party entered a newspapers should leave him two-day debate in the House of alone.” | Commons with the announced inSales director Victor Esparza tention of voting against ratifisaid he was shocked by the cation of the West German Peace
las an example of Communist
The Army cited the following |
twisting of Gen. Grow’s entries: The Red press quoted an entry saying “This is the year” as meaning the Unifed States would start a war. But the full text of the diary said:
viet intentions—particular
erence to the military. Typed were away.
notes all evewing—sort of think-| ing out loud. My conclusion, pretty close to: This is the year.
is fair to hit below the despite desperate opposition by this war it 1s fa Communist MIG jets,
THREE “War. As soon as pos-|driven fighters and radar-con-
was shot down by Airman 2/C
“Started study on an estimate target area,” Mr. Meintel said. Barbour wants this week on 80-“Someone said I got the prop|Uot return to Egypt, I must look ref- fighter right after our bombs|fOr & new house and I still don’t
language Mr. O’'Dwyeg used in
Treaty and Britain's pledge 10|They can’t afford to let the bal-
Red China's border. the alone of the royal family is in
Pilots and crews of the 63 Su.|*Zlle: perfortresses from Okinawa and “My wife and my children are Japan said they saw their 600|free to return to Egypt,” he said. tons of bombs “plaster” the Ori-| Neither my wife nor her parents ental Light Metals Co. plant, a/are in exile, but my wife has recently expanded North Koreanielected to remain with me and so aluminum alloy factory just south|have my three daughters of their of Sinuiju, near the mouth of the own free will, which has made me| Yalu River. {proud and happy.”
The raid also was the greatest ‘King With Me’ bomber attack on a single target in the war and the first major| He answered only a few quesraid in the Yalu River area since tions which he did not regard as United Nations planes hit the Political. Suiho power plant June 23. ° “I am sorry not to be able to
All the B-29s returned safely|answer questions freely,” he said. e 8 Y “I am no longer a king but I still
have two grave responsibilities. The first is toward the Italian trolled . anti-aircraft guns. government which has been very . . courteous to me and I want to T Let Fly avoid carefully saying anything One Red propeller interceptor/that might embarrass them. “I have with me the king of Julius W. Meintel of Wheeling, Egypt. He is as you know only W. Va., a central fire control gun-|six months old but I must be ner on one of the B-29s. careful not so say anything that “We'd been under fighter at-|Would make difficulties for him
tack r since we arrived in the|in the future.” CSE bver me Farouk said that “since 1 can-
propeller-
know where to look. I have not “He came in at us from 10[evenR started to think yet. For the o'clock (slightly to the left of moment I shall stay at Capri bedead ahead). I got him in my cause I have four children
sights and let fly. I didn’t see With me.
| : |Revengeful Bees Take Over Town MADISON, Cal, July 31 (UP) turned from pollen gathering
and
—Thousands of bees swarmed found their hives had been re{Madison's empty streets today moved from a vacant lot. « |seeking revenge. | | ‘They Became infuriated at thelit out on Mawison’s 1000
When the bées started
{town’s populace when they re-|itants, the populace left town.
STRAUSS STORE HOURS DAILY 9:30 TILL § SAYS: STORE CLOSES SATURDAY AT 1} y
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13 » Not 3 simple task 2a Lt. Richard G. Crane of Gal-
veéston, Tex. said he saw the enemy plane “blow up level with my wing.” ! Te The first wave of Superforts|Doctors Baffled went in while the target was y | covered completely with clouds. By Boy $ Collapse Later waves found holes in the] YONKERS, NuY., July 31 (UP} overcast and reported “a hell of|—A 9-year-old boy baffled physia lot of smoke directly over the cians today by recovering rapidly target.” {from a mysterious collapse and ‘Like High Noon’ paralysis that robbed him of] consciousness for five hours. The enemy had at least 19] Authorities at St. John’s River-
searchlights around the area. - | 4. Hos SPALDING « pital said Marko Rubeo Eight searchlights looked on|w,g removed from the critical list
us at the start of the bomb run nq js in “good condition.” They CHIEF—the famous moccasin and kept with us for the longest iq he probably would be re-| 9 05 ' s
five minutes I've ever spent,” said leased in a few days.
Capt. Richard R. Search of Hous-! Men's Footwear—First Floor Mezzanine
Perhaps we will stay here a few months, perhaps more, perhaps less.”
Army pact countries is attacked.ihave European industry to com- kingdom I have and: they like pressure go. needlessly, man of education and tact, not busy with the next one.” g y “He turned a thing that could 'a roughneck,” Mr. Esparza sald.
i belio Moreno said he thought the excoriating Mr. Prescott. | fight if any of the European|ance tip in our favor. They must “My children are now the only | J ambassador had let his blood] “An ambassador should be a him explode because I was too|“»ay m ; : :
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NY
He was found unconscious and ton, Tex., a bombardier, “It was | like high noon all of a sudden.” [Propped up against a fence late
|yesterday. The right side of his The bomber crews relied oni} 3 5,4 face paralyzed. | electronic aiming devices and pre-, family said the paralysis discision navigation to plaster the, bpeared 2s s00n as he re alned. target and to avoid flying over| ..nsciousness & or bombing Manchuria. They also| 4 —- i were ordered to avoid hitting! about 300 buildings near the factoray, which were believed to house civilian workers. On the ground, far to the {south, heavy rains continued to]
slow operations. |
Both Sides Gloomy About Truce Talks
| PANMUNJOM, Korea, July 31/| | (UP)—Both the United Nations |and the Communists took gloomy | views of the chances for an early| [truce in Korea today, But staff| officers kept the armistice ma chinery in moton by haggling {over petty changes in the proposed cease-fire agreement, The staff officers—the No. 2| truce teams—argued briefly to-| day over such minor details as {how to write the words “Korea” ‘and “United Nations” in the, Korean language. A United Na-| tions spokesman said the two teams made “no appreciable prog-| ress.” |
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