Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 November 1951 — Page 18
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The Indianapolis Times
President Editor Business Manager 3 5 4H MANY itain and Frafce think » Tuesday, Nov. 20, 1951 WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—A crisis is de GERMANY, Both Br PAGE 18 i _ veloping rapidly in Allied relations. Theres are” we have gone too fast and mishandled the Al- . ‘more internal conflicts now than for many - lied-Bonn negotiations for a West German semiQwned and published datly by Indianapolis Times Publish og treaty in exchange for limited German rearmaing Co. 214 FU and St. Postal Zone 8. Member of months past. oh to what should be United Press Scrbps-HQaaiq Newsbaper Alliance. NEA Serv. This is all the more deceptive and danger- ment, They are not clear as to what & . . = 156,50 Auch VuISE O1 CUuvianon : ous because of a surface unity. done hut blame us for the stiff German bar-
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A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER : Oo Y i ROY W, HOWARP WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MAN2Z
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Telephone PL aza 5551 Give light and the, People Will Fina Thetr Own Way
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Destination Unknown
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By Talburt
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‘SHOWDOWN IS DUE... By Ludwell Denny 1
What Effect Will Fast Developing - |
As is usual in family quarrels no one is? responsible—the tension is cumulative. And no
one member of the family is solely to blamé--all are involved. The situation is due in part to honest disagreements over policy or methods, and in part to technical incompetence and inefficiency
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Crisis Have on Allied Unity?
gaining attitude. - : y ALLIED REARMAMENT. Britain is the only major’ ally abroad that is keeping pace with preparedness commitments, and she cannot do so for many more months without added American aid.
> in Washington, London and Paris. But the ‘Gi i ! chief cause is .the economic weakness and } . Must the Gift of Life political instability of our Allies, which prévents elngeen i effective co-ordinated diplomatic and defense ca Carry a Union Label? effectiy Wii
NDIANAPOLIS, which is setting one of the outstanding records in America in the drive for blood for wounded. Americans, found its giving. interrupted today. A union in the Philadelphia plant that processes the blood for shipment to Korea threatened to strike, and shut down the plant. There is no other place to handle it. A new plant to do the processing here in Indianapolis isn't quite ready to use yet. So the Indianapolis blood collection center, and most of the others in the country, had to close
Points of Friction : HERF ARE the main points of friction: KOREA. The American public is divided and =n are groups within the State Department and Pentagon over the truce negotiations, and over military” strategy if the cease-fire talks fail. But this internal American split is small compared with inter-Allied differences. In general our Allies object that American policy is too tough. Some suspect Washington does not want a truce." They blame the Reds, but at the same time think we should be more conciliatory, Of course, this encourages Stalin.
: “Two day: ! lost my whij So I went ri “and said 1° “and 1 want scream and |
“HE CAN 3 wasn't the + Something * That mean! , I'm suspici * whether I r
until the strike threat was settled. : IRAN. The British object td our attempted 3 repplator. The strike didn’t acually start, so we've only lost one “honest broker” position, and think we should $a part pe 4n our own b é )
day here in Indianapolis—and in Korea. Our blood center opens again tomorrow, and the 180 persons who were scheduled for today to give 180 pints of blood that might have meant 180 lives can do it some other time. We don’t know exactly what this disagreement was about. The only “issue” so far reported from Philadelphia
“2 supnorting them wholchrar ell interests as well as theirs, They say the net effect of our well-meaning efforts has been to perpetuate the fanatical rule of Mossadegh, who otherwise would have been followed by a more reasonable government. They fear we are going to subsidize him with loans and grants rather than let him fall from his own folly of drying
France and Italy-—partly because of Inadequate tax systems,and mongpolistic economic systems--cannot increase,theif rearmament efforts unaided without serious and perhaps dis-
£.profit, then “s whole job ov * afford it.”
IT'S THE everywhere. too much to house, to pai
y . . ; up oil revenues through nationalization. Our . el a t 18 a dispute over demands for what the union calls a “union people fear his fall would lead to a Communist Astro SenTom ARG JOlliga) Sonseguence But Penter work ’" > “ : . tm egim ongress Wants Suits : Not every shop” and what the employer calls “compulsory union mem- TR EGYPT. Thouzh there is Anglo-American creases foreign aid at the expense of the Ameri- erator, or a bership” which mean the same thing, that every worker has agreement on British protection of Suez until Can taxpayer. . That ircuit, and to join this union whether he wants to join or not. - that is replaced By an Allled Mideast security = An over-all showdawn is APProach nf. "hal they want t i ] 3 . system, there is lack of agreement regarding is why the four Truman advisers are in Kurope: . Wonder how important that 1s to the wounded soldier — 5 the Sudan and the long-term Egyptian econom- Secretary of State Acheson, Defense Secretary BUT A Li gasping out his life on a Korean battlefield for lack of the “, ie-politicg]l problem. Lovett, aid chief Harriman and Gen. Bradley, Lng handy blood that might save him? n y: » I talked o < . : El ALRUR T= MORE REDS . . . By James Daniel ra
It's Up to Military S LONG as we are fighting a war in Korea from bases in Japan, it is clear that our military is going to need considerable freedom of action in the country it is now occupying. How much this will abridge the sovereignty which is to be restored to Japan early next year admittedly is a complex question. But we don’t think the State Department should have the deciding voice in working out details of the agreement
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SHOPPING SEASON . .. By
What's New for
WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—How'd you like for Christmas a pair of handcuffs? A replica of the pistol that shot Lincoln? An Oriental knife for plinking your enemies in the dark” What brings on these melancholy questions about macabre gifts are the jingle bells and the
Frederick C. Othman
Christmas?—-
genuine swinging doors. copied from those on a Barbary Coast saloon, These.cost 845, including hinges, and on New Year's Eve might possibly be useful for evicting drunks historically. I don’t believe I need a shepherd's flute imported from Damascus, nor a Confederate Army
Czech Diplomatic Staff Grows
WASHINGTON. Nov. 20—The Czech government is enlarging its diplomatic staff in Wash-
ington. despite the Senate Internal Security
* .Committee's charge that a former Czech diplo-
mat here was a Red spy. Until recently. the Czech representatidn in Washington consisted of the ambassador, Dr. Vladimir Prochazka, and the first secJan Vinar.
Sen. O'Conor alsa charged that Bihelar: ONE--Obtained information on bacteriologfeal warfare research conducted at Camp Detrick, Md., and shipped “thousands of dollars’ worth’ of research material to Czechoslovakia via diplontatic pouch. TWO Bought quantities of radio tubes and chemicals. which were delivered to the Czech Embassy, and on several occasions was known to be “in the process’ of acquiring components of the proximity fuse, Geiger counter and jet
amazed at ! who live | homes who decorating, and to get want it done
THE TO doing a boo: the home books. A ne Gardens is painting work, masol need,
n " and Eni retary for our keeping tr iy: ; wreaths of phony cap from Georgia Please, friends, do not send ye . . =a. engines. SL ping OOPS and military bases in Japan. holly in all the stores me a pair of shorts with Santa Claus hand- a Rov, : 108 Se wi THREE Placed an order with the Govern- 3 Sone eyes That apparently is the intention, for Assistant Secre- When it still isn't painetd on them. te and air attache men* Printing Office “for all publications on ee ! mal . tary of State Dean Rusk has gone to Tokyo to settle, if Faanksiving. Sooke In Piriiguiar I'd hate to receive any. solid "0 ore negotiating with strategic bombing” and also attempted to obtain an whose re : : ; 8 silver cuff links in t 1 ) from " y wg 4 slations rm : he can, a growing ccenflict between the State and Defense shopping season ens TOR i 8 we hepe are i the State Department Rs A Te A ed German and the Tel Departments over the authority to be retained by the Brows esther every stuffed sailfisn (8995) to hang on my wall and lu In addition. Sen. O'Conor said that Biheler Say age United States after the peace treaty is ratified. must oD Bere Make BY friends think | hooked him. personally, Maj. Korcak replaces Col _ Peporied wR ee an x IAT TH ; : : i . . , nave two Russians in Guatemala assassina H Besides the bases for supplies and personnel, the Army the yuletide spirit. So White Rabbit Ears Due Bieler Mio Jewel Jo : the chief of the Guatemalan army " guaran = : 3 r y x from August, 1¢ unti ! ' abet edd wants to keep some of the buildings and areas it NOW ang wih no forte kiae DO ¥IE STARS, sportsmen, telebrities and - . ponryary. Dr. Procharka The State Department replied that It had had wih . : . : 2s -e TY i ’ . " re . : wiv the “unsubs § i n w occupies, legal jurisdiction over military and civilian per- ado, here is my an- a ey hele Says AnoLter A few days ago. Sen. Her- not alone ~~ 7nY "he un Natalee OF RiON 3 one person When this sonnel and the right to import non-military items to be al Sr tal: cap with large. whit ‘rabbit ears. De Cone a Internal Security detailed information until later. After*¥t had EE sold in post exchanges. In addition, it wants a lot of hope nobody sends to At reir in Slestrie shoe shiner lor 30955: Committee, harged that Bineier Kod been 4 ErOWn JuNiaue of Bfheiers movement, ‘the the jobs of ni - 8 -8 mac 43 (8 5% . . tmen rut « 3 . leeway to use Japanese communications and Japanese ne ob Model for clams, FTI57. aad on shorn ne Rey hiure in Jed apicuas: a the United States CLE ane : z s : x 2 opping my list Le : : 8 r 1s 118 oe industries Which are turning out an increasing amount of of things I don't want are the imported Eu- Pe jo. g Soup hot ang the sandwiches Sen. O'Cohor: said Bineler received State Reprly HOW Dow: supplies we are using for the Korean War. - ropean handeuts, sized tn it any wrist, made poo LIT TIN und ferestiop but Department permission to make nine tps out BIFDS-= Good, G artm : Fey of polished nickel, and including a non-pickable : : y elecirocute myseif. side the U. 8.—two to Czechoslovakia, five to HELP do the dishes with.a hum. sweet hum r The State Dep : unt is characteristically concerned 50k and two steel keys, iy $9.95 how pair. Fo ik do not want a flight-tested boomer- Canada and two to Mexico. and you'll help to make a home, sweat home. I WANT that the Japanese will be “offended” if we ask for too These come wrapped in special holiday. boxes i Exar v like Henry Wallace once used to In Mexico, he said Biheler contacted a rela- * & much-wastec many privileges. It wants to give back everything as and, I have no doubt, should cause gasps of sur- Take life dangerous in Potomac Park. Finally tive of the former Czech Consul Genergl in THE real feminine touch —that's what's gn- It is “friend
quickly as possible and restrain the military to a minimum.
prise under any Christmas tree. Almost equally undesirable from my view-
(I plead with you) send me no rubber cow to be filled up and milked, $4.95. I've already got a cow. Keeping her filled causes a horrendous
New York, who was expelled by this country
in October, 1849. Purpose of the contact, Sen.
ing to pay for all those new springtime garments
1 hear and I often hear
We should think the Joint Chiefs of Staff —if they point are full-sized, authentic reproductions of Bod mg y Born O’Conor said, was to “co-ordinate the procure- % & 5 Your Car t : : , : y S. i th tille - J + W nilking her i¢ downright danger- ment of information concerning the atomic en- A MAID found £150 under a pillow | Service.” can make u assassins’ guns. One is the gun that killed Mc ii g in under a ptiow In an : P their minds whether they're fighting a war Kinley; the other shot Lincoin. These pistols OUs. She kicks. ergy and uranium stocks of the United States.” - eastern hotel. Somebody really was asleep, And 1 an in Korea, or a mere “police action” as the State Department for Christmas. 1951, are made of wood and service Wert
insists—would stand up for our Tokyo military headquarters and tell the State Department where to get off.
they won't shoot. Price, $5.95 for both. “Magnificent as wall decorations.” suggests the manufacturer, And also unique as paper weights. He's not kidding.
HOOSIER FORUM—‘Poor Law Enforcement Here’
one would their money
MY POIN’
. : . For 32 in a gift box there's the Malayan MR. EDITOR: fact she insisted on it. even though it cost me such as ours, do not become the steady more than : | e It, i i L s ure, } ! V AC # py Fixes and Dribbles throwing dagger—“A pewerful, silent, accurate As the head of a family living in the prowl- a day's work. I'm glad 1 went though for my tice ¥ prac word. It has : ; . its -i at 30 feet.” eighborhood™” I feel as though I t say a imnress “th BRT CHF tor $%Por- xa I have bel N THE SE : : weapon; splits a one-inch board at 30 feet.” If er neig g must say a impr ion of the Municipal Court, after exper- As the assisting prosecuting attorney laugh- ! 4 R SERIES of scandals which have swept the Internal the sale of these is good in the next 30 shopping feW words about some experiences we were iencing it is that it's no place for a decent. re- ingly told us, “Well. we i. scared the which Ge evenue Bureau, the San Francisco chapter seems about days. a fellow won't be “safe in the streets Subjected to recently. spectable wife and mother to go to. Perhaps low sa he won't return to your neighborheod buart: to-hew to take first prize. Christmas might. the 1 ; Ove waht last summer, my Nite got’ the your Police renarter will Agree With Ihe, ; I hope those words are a comfort ta all the $e. Doe t : : » al 3 I rest of e gifts it'll please me not to sca t her life from a “peeping Tom. I wa n due time the case was called, Mr. Tom is people living in our neighbarhand. For this we i There, it now is revealed, the assistant U. S. attorney receive aren't quite so gruesome. but almost not at home at the time. Remembering m wife and lawyer were among those present. The pay taxes? pnees. And who began an Investigation was pulled off because he I mean things like the sweet-smelling shower advice, she screamed and the “Tom” ran off climax all happened sa fast. that my wife and —An Irate Citizen pusiness D bath. This is a $3 device, with a perfumed wafer ~ The police were called, but as usual they were I are still in a daze. The lawyer, no orator he but of peop!
wanted to pursue the probe. Then this young attorney, Charles O'Gara, was recommended for dismissal by his immediate superior, U. 8. Attorney Chauncey Tramutolo.
inside. It snaps over the spray head. Take a shower and smell beautiful. One gift that I pondered for mv (except that 1 don’t have one) waz a pair of
playroom
too late. Not their fault of course, The next morning. my wife and I conducted our own little investigation. In the alley we picked up an identification badge, with a man's
rlaimed his client was arrested falsely and his honor promptly agreed with the counselor. The judge directed the assistant prosecuting attorney to explain to us why the man was ar-
Views onthe News
By DAN KIDNEY
GM TELL ing interest good busine charity driv
; To ‘head off this dismissal, which he says would be a picture and number on it and place of employ- rested falsely. In my opinion, the APA didn't = PRESIDENT TRUMAN“ is really busy at at the churel shocking miscarriage of justice,” Sen. John J. Williams FOSTER'S FOLLIES ment. explain a thing. During these proceedings, not Mey Ww eet Besides Wosking su hig state of the driving sch a : 3 : : one word was id to th d 1 m nion and budget messages . ? iy 2 went directly to Attorney General J. Howard McGrath. Sen. MINNEAPOLIS — A Yearner for giaious So, we immediately turned it in to the police by oh Eo said to the alleged peeping Tom bp Bad Pet igs ev Re Nhe Rysed house and science Willi I : : YE Oia Sen yearner for ous since we couldn't expect them to go inte an : : : ; ib own : of good busi lliams helped pull the curtain on the internal revenue living confessed to the theft of 13 cars (six alley after - midnight to investigate on their *r +> POLITICIANS - 2 . , It is the | ~eandals. Cadillacs), four speedboats (three big ones), own TO ADD to my suspicions, Keither of the two Seoul vi find whi Ingest uctiine Even In word-team, ' .le : % altitrg adi “ : : : : oul you d guys who nt t / LY After obtaining a promise from Mr. McGrath not to kn Dssortey nfe golf clubs, a radio and To make it nice and cozy, our peeping Tom. arresting officers were present at the trial. I & : a . ayer it's good, gO« 3 Mi y TRS . 3 vif topcoa . : returned early that evening with a flashlight. must confess that my wife and I are not fam- GOV, EARL WAF NC ' <4 good neig! fire Mr. O'Gara, Sen. Williams disclosed that the young We hear that he yearned for a mode of life looking for his badge. One of our neighbors iiiae with legal dures, ¥ bl 4 Announcement packed 2 wie ara hasntial good busines y y ie :, acious a . : : x : ilar wi al procedures, but as public spirite nouncement packed all the ' ii duns lawyer already has testified before the Senate Finance gracious, saw him and helped him look for it, until the ga D : P man enlisting of the reserves. fama of an
Committee. And that this testimony led directly to the sus-
. . . . . oo pension of the internal revenue collector in San Francisco
And who can gainsav that he did? The stuff he purloined was both handsome and spacious,
police arrived and took the peeping Tom into ustodyv. Again, 1 was; not present, 1 was at work :
d &
citizens, we can and do ask, on which _ side are
the law-enforcing agencies in this city? After
our abrupt dismissal by the Judge and the APA
& & ELECTION DAY seems to be the only time
QUITE =i dealer can't prospects in
. . f ; 1 President Truman win and eight others in that office. ; This fast-moving. light-fingered kid. ‘Mr. Tom” hadn’t much choice but to con- my wife and I had the feeling we had com- & 8 poll, ing to bag A nH =» * on ” Now, some folks may claim, with a touch of fezz it all to the police. Due to my wife's con- mitted the crime. JUST TO prove there tant Anv-inflat th Slgss 1s © “THE ) N ] ionifi ig} nl misgiving dition. his trial was postponed twice, In closing, ‘I agree with the Police Chief Deviacrat na — ' ation ° tions is not. E THE IAG! ITU DE and significance of this interna They wouldn't do that if they rould “ 4's that more policemen are needed to protect us for thats av 2 Shargins er Sid Price-3i00 Listen to revenue corruption, Mr. 0 Gara testified under oath, ‘turns {ake Other folks Pa for their own eas" SOME TIME after the baby came mv wife from the criminal element in this city. But Sil nicag & n o ¢ 13 public relati my stomach. This corruption is far greater than vou know ving was asked to appear in Municipal Court in this please, Sir, carefully instruct your officers in SAFE PREDICT] : rett: 3 8 C 8 re ) : St Rail thot oh s obs Ds hiss : : ALA AFL ‘ N for 1952 —th “N ; . But, heck, that's what made hiz 30 go ase. s fort Zo W . : 0 2—thare will be No one Tt is not the commonplace tax-fix of the gangsters aad ade his 30 good case. I was fortunate enough to go with her, in the procedure of arrest. so that other cases more hats passed than are in the ring « to put a pr
hoodlums. The appalling . . |. corruption to which I refer involves many persons occupying high places.”
SIDE GLANCES ~ By Galbraith
TOUGH SPOT . . .
By Clyde Farnsworth
and esteem viewed by
X 2
: : het : on. i neighbors. For this service, Mr. O'Gara was listed for dismissal. a] ow . . » ’ 4 BE Wilf Policy Makers Squirm Over Sudan’s Future basketball players and the gambler who bribed them were E : i | KHARTOUM. N 20 looking { d th h ~ <x No . < i AR JM, Nov. 20 — ooking toward the time when Now Egypt's fiery Foreign hot o t sentenced to Jail, The bribe got an 8-to-16-year term, the (® \ \ United Btates policy is in a the Sudanese can decide intel- Minister Mohammed Salah FI handle, Hannon to nlayers from six months to three years. ¢ A ! 3 tough spot on the Sudan ques- ligently for themselves, Din, in pleading Egypt's case Official American infor i Those are the penalties for corrupting the dribble of a of. tht To hon A month age EESIL, ou pa: hefofe jhe UDied ravens lu Hos on the Sudan is tur ely a | basketball = / » ! It's known on good author- per, wiped out the British- Paris, has put the ‘finger on British product. We BIge”. } SKe .e : = ity that the U, 8. State Depart- Egyptian partnership in the this tender: spot in British diplomatic mission in th Fi But that's no dribble in the Internal Revenue Bureau. ment disagrebs with Brita.» on gudan, proclaimed “King Fa- American relations, dan not even a cone : what ought to he the future rouk king of both Egypt and He proposed that both Rrit- Now. of course, the British i Honest Men Are Everywhere of He seven or ght ilar the Sudan and broke the 1936 Ish and Egyptian officials and might be more hospitable, Rut Sudanese and thelr millon British-Egyptian treaty on military forces clear out of the ® 100 late, An Amery j er ) can misAT A DE aleterice last week, President Truman ‘quare miles of Africa alors guardianship of the Suez Zone, Sudan ‘so as to allow the Kon now would stir more os seemed to be taking refuge from the scandals which the upper Nile. na. ; Sudanese freely tn express An it would be worth have beset his administration by saying that in his opinio But thiz difference has been THY, AGREEMENT had heen their will through a Pe : : ; g y ga pinion kept pretty sacret-.a polite a topheavy partnership in which for which the necessary ma- TIME { more than 95 per cent of government employees are honest. ng _Srivate Sunrsel ip 28 J Egypt shared only slightly. ehinery, Stmosphere and prep- BETWEEN { He said these emplove 0 giv , 0 destroy the puble Illusion That was supposed to unite aration could he provided with DON'T think 1 hat ployees try to give the government of British-American solidarity the Sudan with Egypt and fin- the co-operation of the United hours when ny fugr 01 what they are paid for and that many of them give far more. in the Egyptian crisis, ish the British in the Sudan, Nations." : wil the Only the foolhardy would dispute this. But the honesty It The Hate he ot Played Siieas: that vai the Way the I 01 the most Juoriant ret "12 TU Thin ut all the Sn deconty. of the overcomes : at way, evidently because Egyptian Parliament ‘ordered and only new point raised by mes . . . whan I'm clone to 1 y ' s number of government Secretary of State Dean Ache- it. However, the British didn't Salah El Din one that wil Your heart . . . never let your : emp oyess oesn't excuse corruption and abuse of their / pon Jeels dldagreeinient with budge. take much British-American thoughts drift to the lone i ta . ain on the : ; : positions by others—even if they are relatively few. v udan would The British said they owed 3MquUIFming to avoid I the ..,.., you know, ., when the
The overwhelming number of taxpayers are honest and decent, too. But some of them are not. And when those who are not are caught, the government cracks down on them. ' They are fined, or even jailed. Or, rather, should be ~Internal Revenue scandals- have disclosed more than enough exceptions to prove the rule. Ls And when the government prosecutes a man who has cheated on his income tax, it does not prosecute him “n the basis that 95 per cent of other taxpayers are honest, It prosecutes him on the basis that he is crooked.
* ‘ .
t = her Terner e. onlin,
J.
“3 €'3 20
telling me | look terrible?"
Ny
"How much longer does this diet of yours last? My friends are
confuse the agreement with Britain on the Suez Canal Zone, Mr. Acheson has insisted on the validity of the BritishEgyptian treaty of 1936 on the Suez, but so far as is known here has never approved indefinite continuation of Britain’'s virtual protectorate over the Rfudan. » » » THE BRITISH profess a mission of education and ime provement for - the Sudanese
a protective obligation to the Sudanese people who would eventually decide their own fu‘ure. The Egyptians argued there could be no free choice by the Sudanese as long as the British hung around. ‘ Meanwhile, the United States kept officially quiet about the Sudan, although the British sometimes gave the impression that Washington supported the British position. This won the United States no new friends in Egypt.
United States tries to sidestep it. It may be the United States has taken much the same pogition in the private disagreement with Britain. r ” n
JUST what positive ideas Secretary Acheson may have had on the Sudan aren't known, but it's eertain thev were not complete accord with those of the British. Salah FI Din's smmphasiz on the United Nations role in determination of the 8udan's future was a
parting hour comes , . , and 1 will have to go . .. dwell on the happiness we've known , . . and not on moments when A . You will yearn for my return «oo HILT come buck again... for all the Joy and bliss we've
Jemown . , . should bridge the
time beiwesn . , , the parting
and the sweet retin , , when
love mukes lite serene, - * =By Ben Burroughs
I
