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Show 14- - LAID DAILY Friday, August 18, 1950 Apprentice Training Program to be Reviewed '"I For Faster Production of Defense Workers f France Portu gal Fight Loss of India ies possessions in the Indian penin sula. Indians still regard them as essentially Indian. They think transfer to Indian sovereignty should follow logically the departure of the British Raj and the emergence of an independent Indian republic. The French and Portugese, however, do not hold with the idea of "Mother India." They insist that their possessions can be merged with the Indian Union only with the consent of the popu lations concerned, by plebiscite. India Determined New Delhi apparently regards Dlebiscites or referendums and any subsequent treaties merely as convenient legal forms for merg ing of the French and Portugese possessions in India. Nehru admitted as much when1 he said in August of. 1949 that! (CentLaoed from Pare One) shells. The frantic Communists if a referendum in French India: to go against merger with poured over the hill, seeking were the Indian Union, "some other refuge on the zar slope. The planes caught them there, solution of the problem would to be found." scourging them with rockets and have shells and deadly napalm, a The French government in June allow burning gasoline jelly that fries 1948. agreed in principle toFrench the land and suffocates the living. the people in the five tiny square The ground quaked under ar- settlements aaggregating 196 and miles with population of 323,295, tillery and mortar. Tanks bedto decide their own fate. recoilless guns joined the They took their time over maklam with flat trajectory fire. what they insisted under Com ing more was the than It munists could bear. Those still French law should be strictly a able to walk plunged down the French referendum. Lost steep slope of the ridge to the One One Plebiscite plebiscite was held among river. : The slaughter was even greater the 38,000 inhabitants of Chanas the North Koreans tried to dernagor, which is a tiny suburb wade and swim the 100 yards of of Calcutta. The vote went over whelmingly in favor of union deadly water. Some tried it alone, with in the others in groups of 20 or so, and other India. Plebiscites territories have been ara few bigger bands of a couple ranged frequently but have been of hundred. For every group that made it, delayed or deferred under various pretexts. a dozen failed. The Corsairs and, Mustangs, Chandernagor was considered little economic- importance to the machine guns and rockets, the of small1 arms from the east bank, the French and the plebiscite there never was taken seriously. permitted them no respite. Had But it is a different matter with until hundreds waited dark, they Mahe, Karikal, and Pondicherry, But have saved .themselves. might as one prisoner of war explained. Yanaon, which represent a contheir officers were either dead siderable accumulation of French or in flight, and in, the con- - vested Interests. xusion ii was every man xor mm elf. French and LONDON tt which InPortugese possessions Jawaharlal dian Prime Minister -Nehru has called foreign pimples on the map of India" are proving difficult to remove. The difficulty is greater than the Indian government expected when it attained, Independence in . Auzust. 1947, The . in New . . governments . - - . three Delhi, farts ana usDon nave ujili-j ferent ideas about these foreign Marines, GIs Score Great UN Victory i . lonely Hearts' Racketeer Caught Chinchilla Hobby Offers Profit LOS ANGELES. Aug. 18 (U.R) An allegedly lonely hearts racketeer charged with bilking wealthy widows of $200,000 was arrested on a tip from his wife, officers said today. Police had; sought George H. Ashley since last April 17 when they raided the Hollywood headquarters of his matrimonial bu reau, "Life's Estate." They WINNIPEG, Man. Addison, an insurance man keeps hi future in bis basement and hopes some day it will yield good profits. Addison raises expensive chinchillas as a hobby. He started with one pair worth $1,650 and now has a dozen pairs In wire cages In his basement. He hopes to enlarge the the branch" this fall and eventually yesterday in a Long Beach hotel. Mrs. Christine Ashley said her devote his lull time to tne chin chilli fur industry. husband called her last Saturday ' Chinchilla coats retail for about and arranged: daily meetings. "He told me he had an Inven $25,000. i "With a herd of 100 pair Of tion which would make a lot of breeders producing 200 pelts a money," she said. "There would year, a rancher could make him- be enough to repay me and self a nice little profit of around everybody. But he said he needed $5,000 a year." Addison said. money to develop it So I gave J; Addison already has sold one him $3500 in jewels, and $250 in of his animals at a profit cash." pair allowed him to buy. a car. that Mrs. Ashley said she was "sort The air force veteran admitted of hypnotized" by her husband that the $1,650 he paid for his but nqw wanted the jewels back first pair of chinchillas was "quite and planned to divorce him. She a big chunk of dough to put out earlier told authorities she had xor a couple of little animals." given Ashley $16,900 for the mat"Until they produced their first rimonial bureau. litter the wife and I kept our finAshley, charged with ,26 counts gers crossed, hoping nothing of grand theft and conspiracy, would happen to them," he said. protested he was innocent. : . (U.R)-Ch- arles : ( ar-rert- old ex-conv- How the Big Bazooka Busts a ict Tank-Ame- rican bazookas, howitzers, tank and anti-tan- k guns now in use in Korea have received a new, highly effective "Sunday punch," in' the form of specially designed shells employing a "shaped charge." Military spokesmen have stated that weapons employing these shells will be able to stand up against any known tank operating today. The diagrams below illustrate just how the normal explosive effect of the shells is increased four to five times by use of the new charge. -- 44s ( IB K EHf a' mcWi wloeity mmd. W MMd( fcsMMS MEpMWffM tfcv CMMTt MtSMMCS fPMI MMf BMFM) M tfcflt CMtM Wlfl 4o tfc aw. " i wwriHl - Sck H st far rtnk Mmm Mb4mM) MMMlfMMaMMy. MMbMmI CMVfMI ed Secretary of labor Maurice J. Tobin has issued instructions to the bureau of apprenticeship of the U. S. department of labor for training in support of the national defense program. The instructions have been transmitted to the service's 200 field offices, including the one in Provo. In transmitting these instructions, W. F. Patterson, director of the bureau said: "In view of the list of critical occupations is sued by the secretary of labor, ano tne requirements oi rearmament program in terms of manpower for the armed services and for the production of military equipment, it is necessary that the defense training program formulated in 1948 be put into immediate effect." This nroffram rail fnr tVi ex amination of the need of specific industrtea for nnrnl(ii tn critical skills and a determination lx were are sufficient apprentices in training in these crafts to f permit a considerable expansion in the volume nf nrnrinrtinn re 3 quiring these "craft skills. Heview Training The field staff wa instriiftorl to urge state apprenticeship councils, local joint apprenticeship TV HELPS MAKE THE HrT BOMB Scientists at the Atomic Energy Commission's Argorme committees, unions, and cmnlnv. National Laboratories near Chicago make use of television in handling, by remote ers to review the quality of train materials. Here an AJB.C employe watches, via the TV screen, as control, dangerous radio-actiing peing provided in the appren-ticeab- le an object almost a fifth of a mile away is bandied by electronically operated arms. The Comal occupations on this criti mission's eighth in received Jost states that the U. S. Is "now under report Congress cal and "to take such measlist, a in of the production way" hydrogen bomb and that progress has been made toward the developures as thev find neressarv tn ment of atomic engines for use sn both planes and submarines. strengthen both on and off the job training." Specific trades listed by Mr. Six Patterson for special attention were aircraft and engine mechanics, boilermaker, refractory bricklayer, laboratory apparatus had no intention of doing that glass blower, instrument repairHOLLYWOOD, Aug. 18 (UP1 Try-O- ut man, machinist, maintenance me- Xavier Cugat's estranged wifejanyWay accused him today of adultery ..T knQW cnanic, muirignt, model maker, f th d j j molder and core maker, pattern1 kit olA UUill Vllltllf 111. (U.R) lliI A hotel GENEVA, !he said. maker, to precision lens grinder, be marry. plans where children take a vacation girlThe suave denied rhumba king vice and versa, from their parents, and then called his has been started by a Geneva the charges wife, Lorraine Allen, "a charming child specialist. Harried parents can get away girl." from the constamt stampede of Miss Allen, a voluptuous redhead, accused Cugat youngsters' feet. Their offspring of the extra-maritromances in own children their ca.i play with amendment she filed age under expert but almost in- a yesterday to her suit for separate visible adult guidance. The Little Yankee Inn, located maintenance. The suit has been about 36 miles west of Chicago. pending in superior court here even has two reservations on file for eight months. for children not yet born, wnose The former night club enterparents plan to take vacations tainer said that since her marriage to Cugat in Philadelphia in 1947, after their Offspring arrive. To parents, it's a place where he had been intimate with Betty the younger generation can get George, a singer in his orchestra, the best of care if mother and dad June Bell, and Abbe Glossman, think it's best for them to be an singer billed as away from home for a while. Abbe Lane with the Cugat band. The parents might want a vacaThe other women were listed tion, or there might be a death in as Jane Does. the family, or danger of contagion charges from colds or flu, or a small , Cugat, informed of the in New York, said he never heard brother expected. of June Bell but intended to School Kept Small marry Miss Lane when free from The age limits are from two Miss Allen. "I'm really sorry for that girl," weeks to seven years. Reservations are made out for three days Cugat said. "She's got bad ador longer. visors. She can't have any proofs So far, the Little Yankee Inn is because none of that happened," small, having a ' capacity of 13 Miss Allen, however, named with facilities expanding to take dates and places where she said care of 20. put the people who her husband romanced the womhelped dream up the idea for it en. From Aug. 15, 1949, until now and brought it to completion this the musician has, been intimate summer hope it will stay small. with Miss Lane in "hotels, night "Children away from home clubs ' and apartments in New need the most careful individual York" and elsewhere, the suit attention. We can do that best claimed. with a small number to watch As for Miss Lane, the suit over," said Mrs. Margaret Jordan, asked a court order to prevent director of the inn and former Cugat from marrying the singer supervisor of nurses at a large in Mexico. Chicago children's hospital. retorted that he "Too many youngsters are left Cugat quickly with practical nurses or, others who don't feel or won't take responsibility for a child's complete welfare. I've seen so many cases of pitiful neglect when a child it The home of Mrs. Myrtle Fransupposedly was being taken care cis was the scene of a delightful of very well." Doctor Mukt Approve surprise party on her birthday The Little Yankee Inn is pre- recently. The following family pared to be everything to a child members presented the honored but his mother and father. The guest with lovely gifts and small guests are accepted only on brought a pot luck dinner which approval by their family doctors. was served during the day: Mrs. Physician's and nurses' care is Thelma Christensen, Mrs. Lucile available constantly. A former Francis, Mrs. Donna Bellows, Mrs. hospital dietician plans all the Margaret Francis, Mrs. Vay Huff, meals. Mrs. Alto Ludlow, Mrs. Annie Children sleep in large, airy Wilson,; Mrs. Grace Wilson, Mrs. rooms and play in a special "Lit- Beth Gordon, Mrs. Hazel Badham, tle Yankee" play school and play- Mary Bellows, and Mrs. Sarah McCormick. ground. The school promises to carry out the same habit and behavior training a child gets at home, with perhaps a few improvements. A child who won't eat spinach, for example, may be cleaning it up by the time he gets home aassssaa n .jmlt because "an outside person some5 a someto times can tell child do thing when hi parents can't," Mrs. Jordan saia. ';,.- Another phase of the liana In volve the employment ox "qualified applicants" for apprentice ship in the 16 to 17 year old f bracket. Due to the time required to learn most apprenticeaale craft skills, the employment oil younger apprentices now will provide a continuing supply of skilled labor. Mr. Patterson urged ithat the field staffs make every effort through contracts with 1 nbor and management, -to register all apprentices now- employed. Order ing a statistical inventory to pro- -' vide a comprehensive study of apprentices in critical czjaft skills now in training in industry, he said: "The bureau, has 238,515 apprentices in all craft skills registered but there are; several thousand others including many on the critical list whot are not on our records. It is only through a complete registration of apprentices that we will be able to estimate the number ft skilled men needed to meet tne antici pated future production require ments, p "Local offices in Ptovj, Ogden and Salt Lake City are equipped and ready to assist any jof Utah's employers with the apprenticeship problem and to see fthat they will continue to have a sufficient supply of skilled workers to care for any emergency that may arise," said William L. Milden- halL field representative of the Provo office at 45 North Univer i sity avenue. ship rigger, loftsman and tool and die1 maker. Under the bureau's plans, those in industry responsible for train ing; will be encouraged to provide training in leadership for ad vanced apprentices who demon strate potential competence as future Job instructors and supervisors. "! Form Core These craftsmen will form the core around which full scale industrial mobilization and produc tion can take place. n I thiee-cUmensio- ( nal ve semi-annu- School to Absorb Parental Burdens Xavier Cugat Had Affairs With Women, Rhumba King's Wife Charges Given j TV TV V RADIATORS REPAIRED Anta Glaaa Installed Specialised Workf Shannan Douglas, daughter of U. S. ambassador to Great Britain Lewis Douglas, 'is being tested for a role in a new movie entitled That Man From Tangier,'' now being filmed in Spain. MOVIES NEXT? AH LANDER'S 490 8a. Univ. 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