Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1950 — Page 23
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country come to the It should be clean. t visitors to think bad things about
a lot of pride in his work and in to that, Without knowing it, John boosting Indianapolis for years before loose a couple of months ago and asked and appreciate more the advanthey enjoy here.
. ”
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5 14 3
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John said. “It shouldn't good things.”
“Profession been with the street department He's been sweeping the Circle for and thinks it is the top assignment. His territory includes N. Meridian St. to Market St.
to Pennsylvania and II
JOHN
:
I've been watching John during odd hours of
the day. The first time he attracted my attention, he was going after an elusive scrap of paper in front of Christ Church. Many a man. never
would have battled the wind. Let the stuff fly.
Closer inspection on several occasions revealed a thorough sweep when John Piglacela was handling the broom. I can appreciate his work a little since I put in some time as a street sweeper myself. Two years ago during the Clean-Up, Fix-Up compaign, I borrowed a broom, shovel and pushcart from the Street Department and went to work. It isn’t easy. John isn’t the kind of a man to lean on his broom. Another reason he's the best in the country: John’s job is to sweep the streets, but he doesn’t take that literally. When there is paper and junk on the sidewalk, he'll sweep it up because eventually it will be in the middle of the street. Construction of the J. C. Penney store presents a problex. While the workers were pouring cement and hauling sand, the Penney side of the Circle and W. Market St. were thick with dust. John battled it every day. : For the past couple of weeks nails have been flying around. Many fly off hammers and land in the street. John doesn’t want to see anyone geting a flat tire, so he gives extra attention to nails. The dirtiest spots on the Circle are the bus stops. John shakes his head when he speaks of them. I asked if he ever took anyone to task for throwing debris on the street. “You can’t say much to people,” was his comment. “It's not so bad if they throw a big piece of paper in the street, you can pick it up easy. I don’t like when they tear up paper into small pieces.”
‘New Language
Ciean sweep all around .. . John Piglacela doesn't miss a thing you throw on the Circle.
Benefit Boost. To Stimulate Housing Action
With $7500 Top
Indiana got a new shot in the
. 5
“THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1050.
, Eases Up GI Mortgage
a
A Safety Dream for Pedestrians
U. 5. Loan Guarantee _ ~ Hiked to 60 Pct. | |
By LARRY STILLERMAN " Times Real Estate Editor } Home buying and building in
This should put approximately
arm today. So Figures 1 Figure 2 John has no quarrel with the business shops Mortgage insurance by Vet- ; | — in, in his territory.- As a rule the sidewalks arelerans Administration loosened! an 8 a. = . . swept at least once a day. up. 5 WwW hi '? S 4 5 G Hoosiers Thrill Sometimes it makes me a little bit mad after . as ing on « 10 et |
I sweep the street and somebody comes out of a store and sweeps the paper off the sidewalk. I have to go back then,” John sighed.
He Sweeps Under Cars HE WILL SWEEP the Circle three times during his trick on busy days when the downtown area is crowded and paper bags are flying. Parked cars and trucks are a nuisance but I've never seen John go around one. He digs
moves, he has a dirty spot. In my book the short and sturdy native of
Rome, Italy, who came to this country after the sulted from application of the new
first World War, is high on the sheet marked “good citizens.” | John Piglacela is a street sweeper, He got the| job with the city in 1938 when jobs were scarce.
He enjoys being in the open the year round. He have not used loan provisions be-
takes pride in a clean Circle where visitors to the] city invariably go. job better than anyone else. }
John is the kind of a man I like to walk up fits, too.
to and shake his band and say, “You're doing! a great job.” |
Yes, sir, if you want to see the best broom of their loans.
handler in the country, take a look around the| Circle for John. Oh, yes, and just because he's; the best. don’t think that's a reason for throwing! stuff. Please use the trash box. |
By Robert C. Ruark
| {
NEW YORK, July 13—Headline said the man shot down a Yak, and this would lead me to believe he has knocked off a Tibetan beast of burden, which gives hair for cloth and milk for rancid butter. Headline says things about Seoul and Suwon, and here we go again, learning a new language. That seems to be one of the nicer things about war-—it enriches the language so. A Yak in this war will be an airplane. We will get just as chummy with Seoul and Suwon as we got with Guadalcanal and Tarawa and Kwajalein and Biak. Bright and sparkling sets of phrases and expressions swell our daily speech, born from the rugged intemperance of a new flock of heroes.
Jugs, Jets and Sack I AM SO OLD I can remember when a jug was a receptacle, not a national of Jugoslavia. Jet was a black, shiny bead old ladies wore on their dresses, not a method of driving aircraft. Sack was a repository for inanimate objects, not
a couch for a military man—or, if “sad” is placed
ahead of it, a description of a fellow who is largely out of step with his time. As a result of the last thing we take a dim (also misty, poor, and murky) view of things we dislike. We are browned off to such point that the subject is strictly for the birds. Chicken enters frequently into our lives, and rarely in a complimentary fashion, John L. Lewis became a cussword for civilian shortage, and Spam a swearword, instead of an excellent cold meat. We learned all about initials in the last one. Important Personage. So is SNAFU—Situation Normal, All Fouled Up. From SNAFU was bred the little brothers—FUBAR, or “Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition” and SAPFU—‘ Surpassing All Previous Foul Ups.” ____The word “operator” and “wheel” reached a ‘fine maturity in the last one, and is used steadily today to denote people who do big things in a large way. Beat up, to connote that the subject man or article had had it, came into everyday parlance.” To have had it means that you ain't got it and ain't gonna get it. So you've had it, mate.
Or Mac. Or Joe. 4
WASHINGTON, July 13—1It's getting so a fellow can't even give his money away, without Uncle grabbing a piece of it first, According to’
Clarence Schock; there ought to be a law.
He is a little billiken of a man, in his eighties, white of hair, pink of cheek, and wearing solidly attached to the hard-boiled bosom of his shirt, the gold-plated battery case of hiss-hearing aid. He's also the léading philanthropist of Lancaster County, Pa., but he is modest about this. He could
do more with his money if the Treasury weren't
~—first-in-line-with-its hand out.
Back at the turn of the century he went into the oil business; by 1942 he found himself sole owner of three corporations worth $1,500,000. He was tired of earning money for money's sake. Anyhow, he had an idea: If more money were spent teaching the kids of his neighbors, they'd be better citizens when they grew up. 2
Tells of Financial Switch : WITH THAT in mind, he told the Senate Finance Committee, he organized the Sico Corp. A non-profit firm with himself as non-paid president. This corporation bought from him his three oil companies for $1 million—real bargain, he said— an contracted to pay him in 22 annual and inter-est-free installments. ? The Sico Corp. took over the oil business and #t boomed. Every cent the firm earned, its elderly president paid to the Lancaster County schools to hire more teachers and install better equipment. So far he’s paid out $316,743. _ Mr. Schock figured that since his corporation was taxing itself 100 per cent for the benefit of the school children, Uncle Sam could claim no share. The Bureau of Internal Revenue agreed for the first six years, but, in 1948, it changed its mind and started taxing the Sico Corp. like any . other business. r
Our drinking language, I recall, was tremend- | ously fattened. Young men who had been reared on raw corn!
and lavatory gin suddenly referred to such things as Eau de Vie, Marsala, “Agi,” or Marianas Guar-
sorts of loosely lumped “vino,” and weird local whiskies, such as the Australian Grays’ No. 9.|
Pink Moroccan champagne suddenly became com-| tended from 25 to 30 years dividers, guarded with iron curb-|
ord of red-eye.
monplace to North €arolina boys with a clear rec- and there is no ceiling on how sides as protection against rubmuch a GI can spend for his bing tires and bumping wheels, | ace ges
Funny words crept in and have remained. Jeep house.
used to be a comic-strip character. Jeep in all the} countries in the world today means an irascible, conveyance with four-wheel drive and a tendency to buck like a horse. “Bazooka” started out as a comic name for a musical instrument and wound
.up as a weapon. Likewise “burp.” This was a
rude manifestation of indigestion and achieved | permanent fame as a German gun. | -“Pear John” still sticks in the lexicon. It is a broad label for an unpleasantness, arising from an original use by disenchanted wives with husbands overseas. “Dear John:” the letters ran. “I| hope this finds you safe and well, and it just] breaks my heart to tell you that I am filing for|
-divorce in order to marry the cutest second lieu-'
tenant in the SOS here . . .” SOS didn't mean come save our ship. Meant Service Of Supply. |
Let's Not Change It 1 DO NOT KNOW where the word “beast,” to| denote a lovely young lady, came from. But the|
services used it and it has stuck. “That’s for sure,” |
with™ profane variations, has also remained to the Federal Housing Administra- engineers say. crowd into peacetime confab. “Rugged” for any tion and GI combination loan.|
rough operation is still with us. I would greatly appreciate it if the dogfaces (unwilling heroes) of this operation stick to the] language I learned in the last mess, as much as] possible, because these Oriental and Russian | names. are going to be rugged enough without!
cannibalizing a flock of new American phrases 0 | which the combination can offer, add to the beat-up old carcass of our speech. And 'some
that’s for very damn’ sure.
the cost of a co-operative housing |
_ So, he roared, what happens? The government! takes 40 per cent of the money he'd earned the! children. If he's to give his money away, he added, | it seems to him he ought to have the right to choose between his county’s youngsters and the: tax collector down in Washington. | The Senators were amazed. They never had| heard of a corporation exactly like this. No, Mr. Schock replied to numerous questions, he was strictly —honest—about his desire to further the public schools of Lancastér County. No member of his family received a cent from the Sico Corp. “But you do get $44,000 a year in payments] for the old firms?” queried Sen. Robert A. Taft] (R.O.). oe anil oc 28 He did that, replied Mr. Schock, but he could prove that he lost $500,000 on the deal. “My hands are clean,” he said, “and I am sincere.”
Produces the Figures |
HE PRODUCED the latest annual report of! the Sico Corp. which showed a profit for 1949 of $40,619 paid to the schools; it would have been! more except for that pesky tax collector. The re-; port explained that a total of $25,241 over the] years paid to the Mt. Joy Township was to transform what he called the beauties of Little Chickies Creek. : ! This passed by the school house. Now there is a new dam, a swimming pool, and a playground. The Sico Corp. considers this a good investment, and invites everybody in Lancaster County, adult as well as child, to drop by for a cooling dip. The Senators scratched their heads. Mr. Schock! took a drink of their ice water, and said he believed they'd be doing the children arsfavor if they hauled the tax collector's hand out of his pocket. The statesmen promised to think about it,
22? Test Your Skill 22?
The Quiz Master om old is the Tndian Medicine Wheel “Sn T!
It is thought to have been laid down by the and used in some form of worship by
Who gave the four names? : : The four Marx Brothers — Groucho, Gummo-—were given their Art Fisher, a monologist, who watched their act from the wings one day and promptly rechristened
: Lee ey | Where is the highest lake in the United States?
Chico, Harpo,
300,000 Hoosier World veterans right in the middle of the bullish real estate market.
have not used any part of their loan benefits under the GI Bill of
eralized features of the recently-|
under with his broom because when that car approved. U. 8. Housing act! affect these GI's only.
_jout “directives
He takes pride in doing the|ried war widows of former serv-|
make ex-GI's eligible under the
his earlier GI insured home be- Center, heavy concrete guards on'1000 block, just past the entrance] {cause of “compelling reasons” not Which many | his fault.
fire, government condemnation OF | raat long, six feet wide and five being moved from a job here tO i, 1. high at either side of in- Bloomington construction firm, lother parts of the country. ‘government’s guarantee to 60 per,
cent of a house loan with a maxi-|
A mum of $7500. Former limit was diente, jungle and torpedo juice, tuba, Arak, alli per cent up to $4000 guaran- to guide vehicle traffic.
|teed. |
iready are frowning on combina-|
iterms-enables the government to
By Frederick C Othman mu up to 95 per cent of
to receive this high insured rate,
|islation which it might be com-
Mars Brothers their odd!
War II
New Type Traffic Controls Nation's Capital
‘Refuge Islands’ Will Replace Platforms for . Loading; Lights to Be Synchronized 3000 in Chorus Get Rounds of Applause
By CARL HENN Here it is, pedestrians. You finally got a break. By DAN KIDNEY The traffic department of the State Highway Commission has Times Staff Writer designed: a renovation and resurfacing plan for E. Washington! The real estate stimulant re-iSt. that provides maximum protection for foot traffic, What's more, the five-mile length from Capitol terms yesterday when the VA set Sheridan Ave. will be safer for motorists, too. i putting the in- The “most modern’ installation t creased benefits into effect. of traffic control in the Mid- tion which instantly cuts off the have throughout the year. G1’ v west,” according to enthusiastic “Walk” if the “Don’t”. goes out| Abd--besides the x-Gl's who department engineers, will in-/of order. Foot traffic then takes giana ciude: Replacement of streetcars by icemen came in for dwelling bene- | trackless trolleys. x { { Stréetcar tracks to be covered There's new hope, too, for those by a smooth new surface of ex-servicemen who have used part pituminous concrete. : Eliminate Platforms Elimination of streetcar load- vided at alleyways. with their off-|
They're home hunters who]
Rights. { For the most part the lib-|
: | |
to day {Capital
Ave. Sesquicentennial
farm women from i nremarfore, some 3500 Hoosier u until the repair crew arrives. The divider strip. will
outs
The VA administrator can |
The divider will end in the ggement.
After earlier stage and . settings,
new terms if the veteran has lost ing platforms
vehicles have to Southeastern Ave. A smaller difficulties
{ crashed. wiversion of the pedestrian island Reasofis Listed ‘trian “refuge islands’ of white on the far eastern stretches ¢ And this includes homes 10st BY .,norete, The islands will be 20 Washington St.
Ralph Rogers operated.
& Co. Inc,
he tersecting streets from Capitol Tuesday offered a low bid of increase the! . . Noble St. $307,441.52 for the entire project.|
A concrete dividing sip two ork a I a | hes h feet wide and four inches high letting of contract this week. |
The new terms shining.
Each a Star
{star in her own right as she fol-
Forty-foot tapered concrete con-|
The time of the loan Is also nections between islands and|JoP 18 Nov. 1, 1950.
Use Neon Signs jn8-
Direct Loans | “Walk” and “Don't Walk” neosi : VA is also now authorized to signs on street corners for clear-! I Lveni g ase grant direct loans up to $10,000 est possible instruction to pedes-| ibirthday.” at 4 per cent to GI's who can't|trians and insurance against Gi | 15 d . buy that interest rate from priv- being stranded in mid-street when in, , Admits vate lenders. That's limited to| lights change. J areas where there is no private] New traffic lights set back on! capital for financing. [the islands, RE Cnoeh to show| A little girl mixed up in her
The direct loan is available above trolleys and trucks. The thinking” has admitted intimacies ,, =. i010 written by John
he said.
ed by Congress. Terms of the allow a constant flow of traffic. Court officials reported today. loan are for = igh Ya th The State Highway CommisAnother provision makes three sion traffic department does not | 1 best tribut inspections of a veterans’ house claim o riginality for its plan) T® charged with contributing {hi* was probably the VA mandatory. That's to Detroit has a- similar arrange-|t0 the delinquincy of the frail. |;,¢, is based on the life of Jame safeguard the ex - servicemen ment and Miami has dividers against shoddy building. - The without the refuge islands. VA's looking out for its insured! loan, too. :
Split Scheduled Also upcoming is the split of known elsewhere, department ,¢ 1134 Broadway, the taxi driver. town, some 50 members of th
{ 1 |
! : , : But the integration of all safety! so nang are, Mrs. Ann Williams, ype state's laureate.
| ridian St., operator [features here has elevated this! ;¢' Ann's Cafe. 1118 S. Meridian | Purdue Glee Club Sings
story.
{her part in the events. Less Than 80 Lbs. |art. -
many lending ingtitutions here al-|
tion loans, Final termination of Put a Lounge the combination is Oct. 20. ' In Bathtub
The liberalized GI loans are more favorable than most terms @® You can now rest comfortably in your bath-
tub... on a lounge,
® No foolin’ . . . there is such a gadget available.
80 pounds, told officials most of Ite applaud.
a A {Mrs. Williams in the night spot. perfect.
Another phase of the new
| macies took place in Harper's tax {after he brought men to the cafe. Court officials said psychiatrists
blamed an unfortunate domestic |situation for her part in the Special trains and numerous char
ount ‘ Vernon vesterday after
project. The project must be oc-|
cupied 85 per cent by veterans @ It's one of the many new
items described in Parade Magazine's “Parade of Progress” next Sunday.
PARADE MAGAZINE «COMES WITH: THE SUNDAY TIMES
Louise Eleicher in New York— | How Does a Conscience Co
Money? What's That? It Was a Tough
Battle of Budget vs. Beautiful Velvet
DEAR BOSS: New York, July 13. _.. Yesterday I had a slugfest with my conscience. Guess who won. It said it may be necessary t You see, there was this suit. A black velvet dream. I started increase taxes. to drool and that's when my conscience came out of its corner The Chamber's position was| With mitts up. presented to the Senate Finance | I suppose you realize that spending money on clothes is an Committee by Ellsworth C. Al- occupational hazard for a fashion writer. One of the latter, from hairman of its Committee | Miami, once told me she put . yord, Shan Finance. He said Con-| more than half her salary on her and velvet suits will really be gress should not enact today leg- back. I'm not that bad...yet. something this fall. I need it in Anyway, there my work Werke lled to repeal tomorrow. was this suit. 5 n- My Work’ Pe Congress Be has written! A black vel... Ek | For that 1 Jot a horse laugh. off excise tax reductions as a OK, OK. - ity ould 2 good Saation casualty of the Korean war and| When I saw | er would know better than is bracing itself for a possible re- it, I sald, “That's § wear a velvet suit to work. And quest for higher taxes to meet for me” Con- what about my Tesolution {0 save mounting war costs. | science said nay. money? What about that?
Called Not Prudent | What about
The administration has advised! no, ©° 5 luton the Senate and House tax-writing| .;iveq this trip? committees it would not be “pru- | Clothes by name dent” to go ahead with excise cuts
“in the light of developments in jae ey? are
erformance.
| Her mother died of cancer aP | Today the Washington Pos
few months ago and her father is!
emmptrtee Sh, i
however,
Tax Slash Now
Favors Delay Until After Korean Crisis WASHINGTON, July 13 (UP) —The U., 8. Chamber of Commerce urged Congress today to postpone consideration of general
excise tax reductions until end of the Korean crisis. :
attention at home, she made up Poe in casual relationships, the doctors, ireported. | and added this comment:
[Baby Killed by Car
man Jr., died yesterday
in a driveway when the acciden loccurred, police said. :
In Cushioning Fall
“Money? What's that? Don't I injury. have a bank balance in four figures?” -
Yeah, my conscience said , . | She was found at the foot
Miss Fletcher
Ch
point.
Korea.” i “I don’t CARE,” = screamed. “1 St., Beech Grove. Her 3-year-old gah Mr, Alvord went along with! And how was I going to Mexico gy, \ Np THAT SUIT.” < _|daughter, Charlene, was that {next apring—hitchhilke, maybe? |g, yy ce threw in the ia her arms.
idea. “ : . 1 landed an uppercut. “The heck . od | Everybody hopes and prays! towel. It was a short fight. Now that the Korean crisis may be | With Mexico—if J want SOmSINIng |r. have a ‘black velvet ont On| Terhune indicated confined to Korea,” Mr. Alvord =&8 Ore . . . ook at that order, at least. pain how she had said. “Even if it is, it may prove “"™ Shade. I wonder if I could have had it/tot start to fall and how she costly in lives and it certainly) My conscience came off the in the back of my mind all the got to her in time to cushion will prove costly in dollars." ropes. What did I want with a time? all, : ak f events take a turn for the VELVET suit? Nice for dates. hus system of wartime taxes How long since I've had a date sed and imposed. With anyone who mattered? events take a turn| I
of
of Mount Whitney, Cal. The
Top Advic Korean W
| Relying Heavily 5 3
WASHINGTON, July 13—Hoosiers are being credited here towith giving the National the greatest show that it is likely to/get his views on the Korean crisis
When the chorus of 3000 Inthe {direction from the traffic lights home economics clubs through{out the state, dressed in -varihave golored gowns, sang the cantata beveled edges to eliminate blow- «Hoosier Heritage” on the Capl- Eisenhower at a luncheon meets if tires accidentally rub. to] grounds last night there was ing at Blair House. Gen. Omar There will be no need to drive pound upon round of applause, N. Bradley-and- Adm. Forrest Pi across a divider and break the from the several thousand spec-| Sherman, two of the top active law, since openings will be pro-/tators and the highest of praise military leaders, attended. from the Sesquicentennial man-|
the two ace experts on Russia work. ~ seats an) ing overtime with Mr. Acheson's
: |props, all were ready when the | In their stead, centered pedes- Will be set irregularly as heeded first note was sounded at 8:30 ip
, m. - Even the weatherman co-
After a day of sultry) : drizzle, the skies cleared and by Charles E. Bohlen, U. 8. Minister
the opening chorus the stars were
Each chorister seemed to be a Harriman, Mr. Truman's personal
Deadline for completian of the jowed perfectly the able direction | |of Albert P. Stewart of Purdue.|'? ormants as... {This was Indiana Honor Day.| |Goy. Schricker sounded the key. ddministration order I note as opening narrator by say-
“The state of Indiana presents]
|a salute to the nation’s capital : on’ the occasion of its 150th|maich to the Hp of the Korean
He later received an illuminated . {scroll to commemorate the event. Series of Intimacies It will be hung in the Statehouse
As the chorus continued With WORLD WAR III — Does the
A. North Korean for one year, unless later amend-|lights will be synchronized ' to wth more than 100 men, Juvenile ycGee, with Bruce G. (Mickey)! attack signify that
{Maguire of Purdue as narrator, it A cab driver and cafe operator became obvious to listeners that
that any state will pay. The can-| United States cut or postpone
$Deyea; id girl after she related wy comb Riley and is filled with Ply its forces in Korea? er the homespun Hoosier poems of
arrangement above anything g¢ and Donald Paul Harper, 23,] As an added tribute to this esfimated Soviet arms shipments
: i Court officials said psychiatrists Purdue Glée Club just back from The pedestrian signals, for in- described the blonde girl as mixed their European triumph, also took, {First cut-off date is July 20, but stance, have a breaker connec- up in her thinking—a reason for the stage and gave several spe-
{cial numbers under Director Stew- afford to send infantry to North
The girl, who weighs less than! Both Indiana Senators and the g ghs le an | ar ag | ATOM BOMB-—At what point,
- " Each told the Gov{her “dates” were arranged bY ernor that the performance was
a 3 * |She claimed many of the inti-| The women, who had spent a : y om {strenuous two days of | spent a Air Force Plane
ling here, including a boat trip to Falls in Forest = noon, left for home in their five’ TUCSON, Ariz. July 13 (UP)—
affair, [tered buses immediately after the in mountainous Crook National = =
deaf. From a lack of love and used this stanza from Riley's
pm “He's a Hoosier, he's a Hoosier, Force Base here said three strI guess that makes him ail right,” vivors were sighted on a ridge RNIN - a 2, “Thi ee ~ 8 “There was no guessing about ne Plane crashed and burned it last night as 3000 sweet-voiced
Hoosier women combined their, Galiura ‘Mountains near Bassett talents to give Washington the [®aK about 40 miles northeast of
mpare With Black Suit? mem = = cine sian. muon vio aor
, PLYMOUTH, July 13 (UP)-— to the scene. Stephen Grossman, 14-month-old son of Mr, and Mrs. Wayne Gross- 4s a military plane but could not of injuries determine the type. Earlier resuffered earlier in the day when ports said it was a large craft. he was struck by a car driven-by Davis-Monthan Air Force base | his father, The child was playing an operation center
Mother Gives Her Life To Save Daughter,3
Beech Grove Woman Suffers Broken
"Funeral services were arranged. today for a young Beech Shaking it didn’t clear my head. mother who gave her life to save her 3-year-old
Mrs. Ruth Terhune, 32, of 31 N. 18th St, Beech Grove, d . |terday in St. Francis Hospital of a broken neck and in
two of them after the decimal Tuesday night by a close friend, r—— ; {Mrs. Joseph Gilliland, 4 8. 1Tth/neighbors, Mr. an
Before lapsing into coma, Mrs.
seen Eh
Truman $
%
On Elder Statesmen, Military Leaders = WASHINGTON, July 13 (UP) —President Truman is relying heavily on the advice of retir 3 elder statesmen and five-star | generals to meet grave problems stemming from the Korean war, it was learned today. . The former diplomatic and mils itary leaders also are being cone sulted by the State and Defense Departments and other governs ment agencies. :
The lineup includes former Sece retary of State Cordell Hull, Gen. George C. Marshall, onetime Army chief and later Secretary of State, and Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, former chief of staff who led Allied armies in Europe during World War IIL Informants disclosed that Secretary of State Dean Acheson visited Mr. Hull at his hotel to
and possible moves on the diplomatic front. Top Military Leaders Mr. Truman also discussed the Korean situation of a week ago with Gen. Marshall and Gen,
To meet emergency problems, Ithe State Department also has its
top policy planning staff. They are George F. Kennan, who was to have retired as State Departs ment counselor on July 3, and
to. France, who has been recalled . | from his Paris post. > Mr. Acheson also is in almost {daily conference with W. Averell
| adviser on international affairs. Urgent problems were listed by
MOBILIZATION — Should the industrial {and manpower mobilization? TACTICS — What should the {United States do if the Commu. {nists continue their victorious
| Peninsula, forcing a Dunkirk withdrawal to Japan? Also what should be done if the North Ko reans eventually te repulsed and driven back to the 36th’ Parallel
but do not stop fighting.
the Russians are aiming for a showdown with the West?
WESTERN EUROPE—Can the
s| arms shipments to Europe to supe
SATELLITES—Does the rapid {march by North Korean forces {mean that the West has unders
e to her satellites in Eastern Eure ope? . : ‘GROUND TROOPS—Can other members of the United Nations ' “| Korea? : (If ever, should the United States {consider using atomic weapons?
- A “large” military plane crashed Forest northeast of here early t today and air search pilots ree ported some survivors were seen. { Officials ‘at Davis-Monthan Afr two miles west of the
shortly after midnight in the
here.
age was strewn over a large area. Ground parties were sent
Mr. Stahl identified the eraft
&
; for B-29s ant t B-501 but officials refused to sa)
{ whether. the plane was theirs.
i
be
5
Neck ‘of Child TE
daughter
of the basement
