The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 276, Ed. 2 Saturday, March 29, 1952 Page: 1 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Abilene Reporter and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Abilene Public Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
7-B .
EN
Way)
>■» the
o flew
York
I then
• fly-
cities,
him
ne on
a pa-
r Will
I with
the
kward
rsed
GIVE TO THE
RED CROSS!
e Abilene Reporter ~32ews
“WITHOUT OR WITH OFFENSE TO FRIENDS OR FOES WE SKETCH YOUR WORLD EXACTLY AS IT GOES"—Byron
EVENING
FINAL
28
8 52
ice.
portant
ay de-
overbid
esult is
its too
onsider-
at the
xample,
ade is
th had
might
le hand
hearts.
J king
ace. If
:, South
at once
trol of
vin four
three
he re-
d trick
if clubs
,e trick
with a
$ forced
dum-
hoping
ird dia-
j with
y play.
over
e sadly
in dum-
is own
club in
he jack
from
th held
trumps.
I - five
g with
est saw
ed with
nth the
reed to
ven-five
1 would
tricks.
trap by
ith was
lack-six
e-seven
st two
people
it time
street
zer, 12.
ed one
led him
had to
hospital
bruises,
where
me X-
ned le
ost. He
VOL LXXI, NO. 276
Associated Press (AP)
ABILENE, TEXAS, SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 29, 1952 —TEN PAGES
PRICE DAILY 5c, SUNDAY 10e
Germ War Charge
Meeting Disbelief
Outside ‘Curtain’
By The Associated Press i Asians would not be surprised at
Soviet charges that the United anything you would do."
States is waging germ warfare in Indonesia's press concerned
North Korea and Red China are with a cabinet crisis, has paid
meeting in general with disbelief almost no attention to the Com-
outside the Iron Curtain countries, munist charges. Government of-
an Associated Press survey showed ficials privately are skeptical of
today the accusations but say the Chinese'
It is impossible to tell what effect1 should “prove what they say is
the Soviet charges are having on true" by admitting an international
the populations in the Communist investigating committee.
countries. Responsible observers of public
opinion feel, however, that the con-
stant Red reiterations of the
charges has aroused "widespread
doubts" among many Indonesians,
who usually tend to be suspicious
countries.
One of the chief aims of the
Soviets is to sell the millions of
people in Southeast Asia the Idea
that the Western powers have no
compunction against unloosing the
dreaded weapons of germ warfare
to further "Western Imperialism."
REDS REFUSE
The United States and Britain
demanded that the International
Red Cross or the World Health
Organization be permitted to send
experts into Communist China and
North Korea and report what they
found. The Communists replied
with a scornful no.
British Foreign Office officials
believe the Communist refusal to
permit such inspection has blunted
the effect of the Red propaganda
on the minds of Asian peoples.
But the officials admit that coun-
teracting the “big lie” tactics of
the Soviets is a tough task, and
the Communists will have a victory
even if they raise doubts in enough
minds.
Newspapers in French-controlled
sections of Viet Nam, where the
French are heading the fight
against the Communist-led Viet-
minh, view the germ charges as
“just as ridiculous as the Commu-
nist accusations a couple of years
back that Americans were drop-
ping potato bugs in the Soviet zone
of Germany and Czechoslovakia.
Saigon newspapers give a big
play to the Red charges and the
American denials. Many of the
papers have pointed out that the
Chinese Communists killed off
many of their best physicians in
purges, are undoubtedly short of
medical supplies and are under-
going epidemics. Saigon radio
broadcasts emphasize that the
Reds have refused te agree to any
Impartial investigation.
INDIA 'HORRIFIED'
In India a top level official sum-
marized his government's reaction
to the Soviet charges as “incredu-
lous horror."
India's press would like to see
an impartial investigation, “pref-
erably by the International Red
Cross.”
Some followers of Mohandas
Gandhi, however, are inclined to
give the Chinese Reds the benefit
of the doubt until an inquiry is
made. Said one such disciple to a
Western questioner:
“After you dropped the atom
bomb on Japan, I'm afraid the
Indonesia’s
press, “concerned
of Western sincerity.
In Western Europe, as expected.
offlei.il: and the press—with the
exception of the Communist organs
—ridicule the Soviet germ war
charges.
BACK TO THE WHITE HOUSE — As Mrs. Truman looks
on, President Truman holds up a gold key to the door of the
White House. Returning from a three-weeks vacation in
Florida, the President arrived in Washington as the new!
rebuilt mansion was re-opened for occupancy by the Chief
, Executive and his family. (NEA Telephoto)
New Steel
Talks Slated
WASHINGTON (A — A sudden allowance-perhaps not to be given
peace move by the steel industry " 4* - * " M - **
spurred hopes today that a sched-
uled April 8 steel strike may be
averted.
The industry's six largest pro-
ducers arranged to begin meetings
Monday in New York with CIO
President Philip Murray, head of
the steelworkers union.
The facts that the bid for the
meetings came from the companies
and that they are willing to take
the unprecedented step of bargain-
ing as a group with the union
seemed promising.
This indicated possibly the in-
dustry had been passed the word
that the government was ready to
give it the price relief industry
has said was needed before it could
make a wage deal with Murray for
650,000 basis steelworkers.
Murray himself carefully refrain-
ed from expressing any optimism,
telling the workers from Pittsburgh
they would be fully advised of any
progress to the meetings, adding:
“It is not to be assumed that
the convening of the conference
indic ates agreement upon the
issues.”
None of the stabilization officials
here who have been wrestling with
the price problem would talk. But
negotiations had been in a stale-
mate. and now that they were sud-
denly revived, and in a business-
like manner, seemed to indicate
something bad happened.
It was considered possible the
industry had merely received iron-
clad assurances of a future price
District Play
Tourney Set at
AHS Tonight
Abilene High School, San Angelo
High School, and Newman High
School of Sweetwater will compete
in a District 3AA Texas Interscho-
until the steel labor dispute had
faded out of the public eye, per-
haps several months hence
At any rate, well-informed gov-
ernment labor officials suddenly
were betting against the prospect
of a strike.
Officials figuring in the price
talks have been mobilization boss
Charles E. Wilson, stabilization
chief Roger Putnam and price
stabilizer Ellis Arnall. They saw
President Truman together at the
White House yesterday, but none
had any comment afterward.
Aides to some of them insisted,
moreover, that no price deal had
been set for steel. Arnall and Put---—_---------.
nam were represented as insisting sent "Nine Girls” directed by Eliz-
that any steel price boost might
upset the inflation-control apple-
lastic League one-act play tourna-
ment at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the
Abilene High School auditorium
The AHS entry, which is the
third act of Thornton Wilder's
“Skin of Our Teeth," is directed
by Ernest Sublett.
Th cast includes Betty Rhodes,
Glen Beacham, Bill Behrens, Gena
Powell. Judy Jarrett, Don William-
son, Kathryn Young. Norma Atkin-
son. and Paul Harper. D. G. Mc-
Coury is stage manager.
San Angelo High School will pre-
a be th Eaton.
cart.
But a delay in a price boost for
an appropriate period could create
a public impression that the ad-
ministration had stood fast on the
price front, an impression which
eventual price boosts later on
might not succeed in erasing.
The cast includes Martha McMil-
Ian, Carline Pinkston, Joyce Mur-
phey, Bettie Williams, Charlotte
Shelby, Rose Marie Mason, Bren-
da Beck, Judy Johnson.
Newman High School of Sweet-
water will present the third act of
Huxley's “Gloconda Smile" direct-
ed by Jerry Powell.
9 U. S. Planes
Lost in Week
rmy Firepower
Praised by Collins
SEE-SAW MANEUVERS
Armored, Airborne
Divisions in 'Battle'
By WILBUR MARTIN
FORT HOOD, Tex., March 29 (
—The two divisions that think they
are better than any outfit in the
Army — the First Armored and the
82nd Airborne — had Exercise
Long Horn as a private battle to-
day.
The First Armored took over U.
g territory yesterday, tangling for
the first time on a large scale
with the 82nd “aggressor" forces In
this biggest air-ground maneuver in
U S. military history
The 47th Infantry Division, which
has born the brunt of defending
U. S. positions, went Into reserve
The results of the meeting be-
tween the First Armored and the
82nd were eye opening.
Almost first crack, they nabbed
Mat Gen. Charles D W Canham,
commanding general of the 82nd.
He ran into a road block.
Canham said the road block
couldn’t stop him — he was travel-
ing with a simulated platoon The
umpires said be was right.
Son Is Born
Mr. and Mrs Glynn Arthur. 3226
Roberts St., are parents of sn
eight-pound. 1-ounce son born
Tuesday, March 25. In Hendrick
Memorial Hospital He has been
named Stephen Glynn.
The aggressor forces captured
Pidcoke, but lost it later to the
First Armored.
They first used “hit and run"
tactics against the aggressors, driv-
ing deep wedges Into the green-
clad 82nd troops, then withdrawing
to stabilise lines
A major battle between the two
forces loomed before the rest and
regrouping scheduled tomorrow and
Monday.
Gen. John E. Hull, vice chief of
staff of the Army, finished a quick
inspection of the maneuver area
yesterday.
SEOUL (B—U.S. Fifth Air Force
lost nine warplanes over North
Korea in the week ended yester-
day. two of them in air combat
with Communist MIG-15 jets.
The cast includes Ann Cowan.
Norman Baxter, Dan Bonner, La-
Velle Richburg, Ira Hill, Merlene
Hale, Ken Long. The stage crew
includes Robert Hudspeth, Betty
Summers, and Keith Busby.
Winner of this contest will be
eligible to compete in the regional
* contest to be held April 19 in Step
henville.
The weekly Air Force summary
today said the bag of Red planes
during the same period was four
destroyed, three pr ably de-
stroyed and nine dai. ged.
The two Allied pianes lost in air
battles were F-86 Sabre jets Three
F-84 Thunderjets were shot down
by Communist ground fire. One
B.26 light bomber, two Marine F4U
Corsairs and one Marine F9F jet
failed to return from their missions
for unknown reasons.
Thunderjets dived th-ough holes
in overcast skies Saturday and shot
up Red bunkers on the Eastern
Front Ground-hugging fog ob-
scured most North Korean targets.
B-26 light bombers destroyed 54
supply-laden trucks on North Ko-
rean highways Friday night B-29
Superforts attacked Red rail and
highway targets at Sinanju and the
rail yards at Hamhung
There was a flurry of small Red
attacks across the 155-mile battle-
front late Friday and early Sat-
urday.
Governors Heard
On Tidelands Issue
WASHINGTON, March 29 @ -
Letters from governors or attorneys
of eight states were read to the
Senate yesterday by Sen. Cain (R-
Wash) in his fight against the gov-
ernment’s claim to submerged land
beneath the marginal seas.
The letters, asserting that the
government's claim is “unwarrant-
ed federal encroachment on states’,
rights." Cain said, came from Ore-
gon, Maryland, Georgia, Utah, Lou-
isiana. Pennsylvania, South Dakota
and New York
Cain said they "indicate conclus-
ively that resources far more nu-
merous than gas and oil are in-
volved" in the oil land issue.
"There is growing apprehension."
he continued, "that to admit the
validity of the doctrine of para-
mount power over gas and oil is to
admit paramount power can reach
out and grab every resource in the
land."
Truman to
Open War on
GOP Tonight
By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH
WASHINGTON ( — President
Truman mounts the political stump
tonight—and Sen. Burnet Maybank
(D-SC) urged him to "end this con-
fusion” by announcing whether he
is going to seek another term.
But Democrats closer to the
President seemed to have the gen-
eral opinion he probably won't tip
his hand in an address here at
the $100-a-plate Jefferson-Jackson
Day dinner.
They looked for Truman to come
up instead with a blast at the Re-
publicans in the “give 'em hell”
style of his 1948 campaign.
Along with many other Southern
Democrats in Congress, Maybank
is supporting Sen. Richard Russell
of Georgia for the party's presi-
dential nomination.
The Russell camp's primary goal
is to keep Truman from being re-
elected, if he decides .to run—and
the Georgian's backers would like-
to know Truman's intentions as
soon as possible so they can map
their strategy.
Maybank said, however, that
"aside from any such factor, he
(Truman) owes it to the people
to say now whether he is going
to try for another term." May-
bank added:
“The time has come for the
President of the United States to
put his cards on the table and end
this confusion He should do that
in justice to the Democratic
party."
Maybank. Democratic national
committeeman from South Caro-
lina. told a reporter. "The people
want to know now who the candi-
dates are going to be for the Dem-
ocratic nomination, and they are
entitled to know.” 3
He also said the lack of an an-
nouncement by Truman is playing
bob with Democrats in Congress
“who are up for re-election and
don't have any idea whether to
support Truman or someone else”
for the White House.
Only one avowed candidate for
the Democratic nomination — Rus-
sell—is slated to attend tonight's
Jefferson-Jackson dinner.
Sen. Kefauver of Tennessee is
campaigning in the Midwest for
the nomination, and Sen. Kerr of
Oklahoma, a contender if Truman
bows out, will be speaking at a
similar party dinner in Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Ike Scores
A
U. S. Weapons
Called Superior
By RUSSELL BRINES
WASHINGTON —Gen J Law-
too Collins says the Army has in-
creased its firepower by 50 per
cent over World War It and is
making “superior weapons to those
of the Soviets ”
The Army chief of staff told Con-
gress the Korean campaign-which
officials disclosed has cost the
Army alone over eight billion dol-
lars—proved this superiority.
Collins said the American arsenal
of weapons—from artillery to tanks
—now would be “tremendously ef-
fective” against a mass Russian
attack in Europe.
In the future, he said, "atomic
artillery and guided missiles with
and without atomic warheads will
greatly enhance the power" of
forces trying to hold back a mass
assault
TESTIMONY RELEASED
Collins and other top officers tes-
tified last month before a House
appropriations subcommittee on Ar-
my requests for $14,200,000,000 of
new funds in next year's 52 billion
dollar military budget Their testi-
mony was released today.
Maj. Gen G. H. Decker chief
Army budget officer, said the
Army’s share of the Korean fight-
ing averages about 380 million dol-
lars a month, even during the
"twilight war.”
He said the Army cost was
around seven billion at the end of
last year and probably would reach
nine billion by next June 30, if
fighting continues.
Decker said this was the cost of
maintaining the Army and the ma-
teriel it had supplied to other
American services and United Na-
tions allies. It does not represent
the total American or Allied cost
of the campaign.
NEEDS MORE CASH
He said the Army would need
a supplemental appropriation of
about two billion dollars if hostil-
ities continue through June.
Collins said “an armistice under
honorable terms would be a suc-
cessful conclusion" of the Korean
campaign. Meanwhile the objective
is to bold on to present territory.
The subcommittee also was told:
1. Army draft calls will jump to
around 50.000 a month after July
1, more than triple the 15,000
scheduled for May. New recruits
will be needed to replace between
600.000 and 700.000 inductes who
will be released from service be-
fore June 30, 1953.
2. Antiaircraft defenses around
key American cities and industrial
areas have been more than doubled
but are not yet sufficient, Collins
said. However “our new rockets
and missiles are showing great
progress and will materially
strengthen the defenses of our
cities against enemy air attacks."
Collins said a Russian attack on
Europe would be met by the “great
firepower” of conventional weapons
plus a “series of new anti-tank
weapons.” equally effective against
troops and armor.
These would be augmented by
“greatly improved tanks” and air-
power
“We know from experience that
such a combination,” he said, “can
greatly reduce the offensive power
of an Army that uses masses of
manpower and a great many
tanks” such as the Russian* do.
DR. T. •. PAINTER
Dr. Painter
SOUTHERN DISHES LAG
Army Chowhounds
Like Turkey Best
By FRANCIS J. KELLY
WASHINGTON * — American
soldiers like roast turkey the best
among all meat dishes, baeon-and-
turnip-greens the least. They’re
strong for fresh sliced tomatoes
and buttered corn on the cob, but
will have little truck with aspara-
gus or candied parsnips. Banana
cream pie is their favorite dessert,
stewed apricots their unfavorite.
The Quartermaster Corps fur-
nished the House Appropriations
Committee a chart of food prefer-
greens No. 33 among the vege-
tables
They cheered for cold potato
salad and grapefruit - banana -
orange salad, but 48.9 per cent
said no-thanks to chilled asparagus.
Milk turned out to be the ser-
vicemen’s favorite drink. Hot cof-
fee came in fifth, behind lemonade,
cocoa and tomato juice.
STRAWBERRIES POPULAR
"There are certain things sol-
diers like: there are other things
if la practically impossible to put
down their throats,” Quartermas-
ter. Gen. G. A. Horkan told the
congressmen. “Strawberries are
very popular: fish they do not par-
THE WEATHER
V. s. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
WEATHER BUREAU
ABILENE AND VICINITY * Partly
eloudy and warm this afternoon. Fair and
mild tonight. Partly cloudy and warmer
Sunday High Saturday afternoon, 76
decrees low Saturday night, 55: high
"EASY AND SOUTH CENTRAL TEX-
As — Partly eloudy Saturday, Sstur
day night and Sunday. Warmer Saturday
moderate to fresh southeast to south
"NORTH CENTRAL AND WEST TEXAS
— Partly eloudy Saturday, Saturday
night and Sunday A little warmer Sat
urday TEMPERATURES__.
7 P.M. - A
s--
fare 1. unoareturnngo M hour
sc M/Tie "he *
Barometer reading at 9: 0: 28J9.
Relative humidity at 9.30: %
CISCO BUILDERS— These were key men in drafting the work program of the Cisco Cham-
ber of Commerce It was a composite of ideas offered by Cisco citizens in nine clinic meet-
ings Left to right are E. L. Jackson, Chamber president; James S Duff, chairman of the
Plan of Work Committee; Mayor G. C. Rosenthal, a committee member; and Ralph Dun-
can, Abilene, member of the, West Texas Chamber of Commerce staff who worked with
the citizens in the meetings See story to page 3-A. (Staff photo by Clint Kapus)
Win in Maine
BANGOR Me. Gen. Eisep-
bower gets nine—maybe 11—of
Maine's 16 Republican National
Convention votes; the other five
are held by Taft delegates.
Two members of the delegation
elected at yesterday’s state con-
vention windup say they're neutral.
But they reportedly lean to Ike as
a presidential nominee
The general's campaign chief
didn't hesitate to claim them. Sen.
Henry Cabot Lodge (R-Mass) said
in Washington that 11 delegates
were for Eisenhower—“A notable
and significant victory."
Sen. Taft, in Milwaukee, said the
outcome was “about what we ex-
pected"
"It was no surprise," he added
"In fact, in some respects, it was
an improvment since we got only
one delegate there four years ago."
The delegation will go to Chicago
unpledged, as to the custom of
Maine Republicans.
Eisenhower's candidates won all
five delegate seats from the First
Congressional District and four of
six from the Second (the other two
are the "neutral.s"l. Taft adherents
took all five seats representing the
Third District.
The Third District is the home
of Sen Owen Brewster (R-Me), a
vigorous Taft supporter, who saw
the results as “another battle of
the campaign and no occasion to
be disturbed over future possibili-
ties."
But Sidney W Thaxter of Port-
land, Eisenhower’s Maine chair-
man. declared that “the clean
sweep of the First and Second Dis-
tricts clearly shows that a majority
of Maine Republicans favor his
candidacy.”
Both camps had claimed the
Second District, and some Taft
people attributed the general's vic-
tory there to a speech made by
Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R-
Me) in nearby Orono Thursday
night. __
Lubbock Man Sued
TOPEKA, Kan. March 29 , —
Roy Fulton of Lubbock, Tex., was
sued yesterday by the Chicago.
Rock Island and Pacific Railway
for $150,000 damages to a truck-
train smashup near Elbing, Kan.,
Sept. 1, 1951.
ences based on a series of surveys
among the troops. The mess hall
hit parade became available to-
day with publication of hearing on
the 52 billion dollar defense budget, very popular: usn,
- POT ROAST NEXT • ticularly care for.
Pot roast of beef crossed the
wire a half length behind turkey,
followed by swiss steak, fried eggs,
baked ham, barbecued beef, spa-
ghetti and meat balls, grilled ham,
grilled liver with smothered onions.
Fourteen per cent just couldn't take
that one
Southern cooking took a body
Rep. Sikes (D-Fla) of the com-
mittee suggested that the Army do
everything it can to economize on
the grocery bill.
"When things are left over in
your home or mine," he observed,
“we get them the next day in
hash or salad.”
Gen. Horkan assured the con-
blow when the soldiers rated black- gressman he was doing everything
eyed peas No. 22, boiled sweet- he could to promote that kind of
potatoes No. 24 and simmered leafy corner-cutting in the camps 1
Ex-Sergeant Jailed
In ‘44 OSS Slaying
BUFFALO N Y. A
U.S. Army sergeant was held in
jail today as Italy began court
action to extradite him for the
wartime “deuce of spades" slaying
of a “cloak and dagger" major.
Carl LoDolce was arrested yes-
terday at Rochester and brought
here on a charge of being a ‘fugi-
tive from the justice of Italy”
U.S. District Judge John Knight
ordered him held without bail and
set a hearing for Wednesday
The Italian government and the
U.S. Defense Department accuse
LoDolce of murdering OSS Maj.
William V Holohan behind enemy
lines in Northern Italy In 1944
The Defense Department named
former U Aldo Icardi of Pitts-
burgh as the man who "hatched’
the bizarre murder plot
The three men were on a mission
for the Office of Strategic Service
behind Germany lines in Italy
ABILENE'S 1952
TRAFFIC SCORE
Fatalities in 1952
Consecutive deathless days 35
The Defense Department said
LoDolce “drew the two of spades”
and got the assignment to shoot
Holohan when Icardi decided poi-
son given to the major earlier
might not work.
Icardi’s attorney said last night
in Pittsburgh that Icardi was
awaiting arrest. "We expect it.”
he said
J
A
Accidents Friday
Accidents in 1952
Injured Friday
Injured in 1952
•ooe CITIZENS
.... 313
0
40
ere Base me
Resigns From
UT Presidency
By DAVE CHEAVENS
AUSTIN, March 29 1*1 — !>.
Theophilus S. Painter resigned to-
day as president of the University
of Texas, saying he was eager to
return to his zoology laboratory.
"I consider my mission has been
accomplished,” he told The Associ-
ated Press.
He has been president since the
stormy days following the removal
of Dr. Homer P. Rainey in 1944
■I have always said that I would
get out of administrative work as
soon as I could,” he said.
“Now 1 want to catch up with
scientific developments that have
come during the past seven and
one-half years."
Dr. Painter's letter of resignation
was in the hands of Chancellor
James P. Hart. He will present it
to the regents today.
Dr. Painter said his resignation
would be effective at the end of
this fiscal year, Aug. 31.
Dr. Painter was elevated to the
presidency on a temporary basis
when the regents ousted Dr. Rain-
ey.
✓
The Rainey ouster climaxed a
long series of disputes between him
and the governing board in which
Rainey claimed the principles of
academic freedom were being vio-
lated. The board accused Dr. Rain-
ey of being a poor administrator.
Rainey is now president of Stephens
College, Columbia, Mo.
After a period as acting presi-
dent, Dr. Painter was made presi-
dent on a permanent basis. Subse-
quently, the regents revamped the
university administrative system
and named Hart as chancellor of
the entire university setup. Dr.
Painter remained as head of the
branches in Austin.
He was known to have told Chan-
cellor Hart many months ago be
would like to return to his scientific
researches.
Warm, Rainless
Week End Due
The light drizzle early Saturday
morning was just a teaser, the
Abilene weatherman said.
Overcast skies were due to break
up by this afternoon without let-
ting loose enough moisture to
measure.
Cisco came the nearest to having
rain of any reporting point, but the
light sprinkle there didn't top a
hundredth of an inch.
Junction. Del Rio and San Ange,
lo had light drizzles which did not
measure more than a trace. Less
than a trace fell at Abilene at
7:30 a m. and again about 8:30.
A warm week end is in prospect
The marshals acted on an order with a high Saturday of 75 degrees
signed by Judge Knight, who had and Sunday of 80 degrees. Low
received a request from Secretary Saturday night is expected to be
55 degrees, about like Friday
night's low of 54.
of State Dean Acheson
Acheson's request was based on
affidavits from the Italian consul
general in New York City and the
consular agent in Buffalo, In ac-
cordance with an 1868 extradition
treaty between the U.S. and Italy
After last night's brief court ses-
sion, the slender 30-year-old Lb
Dolce and his tiny, dark-haired
wife, Ruby, 26, were permitted
time for a few words together
The LoDolces, who have two
young sons, quietly declined to talk
to newsmen -
The Defense Department re-
leased details of the Holohan kill-
ing last August. It said the major
was killed after be and Icardi
argued over how much American
TODAY’S MARKETS
NEW YORK. March 29 0n — The
stock market was higher today at
the opening with trading active.
Steels, oils, rails and motors were
actively higher. Bethlehem Steel
opened up % at 51, Northern Pa-
cific up % at 92‘s, and Phillips Pe.
troleum up % at 58.
Other advancing included Chrys-
ler, Douglas Aircraft, General Mo-
tors. U. S. Rubber, Southern Pa-
cific, Radio Corp., U. S.’ Steel,
and American Cyanamid.
aid should be given to Communist . u
and non-Communiat bands of Ital-Newsmen to Witness
Ian partisans
Holohan wanted to hold up dis-
Nevada Atom Tests
WASHINGTON un—Atomic tests
tribution of arms pending a more
thorough check, the department
said while Icardi felt the Com- to ^.brid to Nevada the fourth
munist elements were stronger and week in April will be witnessed by
should get immediate help to light- a limited number of newsmen end
IM the Germans,civil defense officials.
ewvil defense officials.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 276, Ed. 2 Saturday, March 29, 1952, newspaper, March 29, 1952; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1648845/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.