Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1952 — Page 21

31, 1052

- Tey

ne

. 3 4

“i

ep Toad,

“achin” bones. '5 Surf Club, a modest.dean-to witihaccommodations

“Inside Indianapolis . By Ed Sovola

BERMUDA, ‘Jan. 31— Five hours by air to Néw York, then three hours and three cocktails to this “island. paradise. Where is my sun tan lotion? The chill of Indianapolis is just leaving. these At my back is the Elbow Beach

: for 320 guests. Shine on, sun. I'll turn over * shortly. : This place may prove adequate. It has a

“@

chases

. problem, and { &is necessary fo

-

« private beach with cabana facilities, en-tout-cas

tennis courts (I, think that means someone the wild shots), game house, golf ‘course, nightly encns featuring native calypso bands and several cocktail bars. Gazing out across the turquoise water and digging my toes into the gleaming? soft, warm sand, I feel like a piece of fresh liver. The only isn’t pressing since no solution another five hours, is what to do tonight? o So SD WILL IT BE dancing beneath the stars: as the witchery of a Bermuda night casts its magic spéll? Will it be a carriage ride through the quiet lanes where the aroma of hibiscus and oleander make you forget in a moment the alley behind the Press Club? I don’t know, maybe window shopping in Hamilton or St. George's would be appropriate. There are so many bargains here. For example,

' the visitor can go to Frith's and pick up a dandy

morrow,

WHAT A LIFE—"Time dards still in Bermuda’ for "Mr. Inside." (His trip surprised us, too—The Editors.)

It Hap By Earl Wilson

NEW YORK, Jan. 31—The other day, Miss Carol Stone, daughter of the famous veteran Hollywood actor, Fred Stone, carried a lunch pall into a W, 524 St. restaurant. “Why the lunch pail?” inquired a friend. Miss Stone was quite frank about it, as befits a young woman playing the lead in the revival of Fugene O'Neill's § Desire Under the Elms.” “I carry my falsies in it,” stated Miss Stone, bluntly, “for my knees.” Now the confusion was doubled, and trebled, and quadrupled, for. falsies for knees are unknown in Our Set. But The Mystery had to be cleared up, and eventually I waded through the snow thinking how I'd like to be in Florida, and visited Miss Stone in the Mary MacArthur Dressing Room at the ANTA Theater where she was full of blushes and given to much stammering and coughing when I brought the matter up, Se ap Bb “a MAN just told me he informed you about

’it—and I almost ran him out of here,” she fumed.

“It's not nice to talk about because of the dignity of the play. And Mr, O'Neill's picture on the cover of the ‘Playbill’ and everything.”

“Oh, it'll become a classic little story that'll be enjoyed by everybody,” I argued. “Well,” she said, ‘because of the peculiar construction of my knees, I have to wear somethings on them. Especially when I'm on them a lot as I am in this play. “In ‘Dark of the Moon,’ I wore basketball guards on my knees. “I was planning to do the same in this Play. I'm on my knees practically all the time. And I have very sensitive knees. “Then somebody said, ‘Why don’t you do as all the dancers do—wear falsies on your knees? “I'd never heard about it. These are real sponge rubber. I put them in a lunch box so I wouldn't forget them as I carried them around. As I might if I just carried them in a sack.” “Did vou ever forget them?” “Once,” she admitted. “I wasn't going to tell you about them, you know. I even hid them before you came in. n The lunch pail was on_her dressing table. Pre-

. sumably it was empty just now. Miss Stone was

busy putting on a remarkable wig. She had hoped I would write about that. But under the circumstances, how could I?

Americana

By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Jan. 31—Everyone knows that Mr. Will Rogers, the late gumchewer, was a wise and salty. man, and the ovérbold Republicans may do exceeding well this year to heed some of his ancient soothsayings, as recently exhumed by Collier's. Thé magazine quotes from the '28 elections, according to Will: “Corruption h a s supplanted the tariff, as a national issue. But it's awful hard to get people interested in corruption unless they can have some of it. “You take a fellow that hasn't received any corruption, and it's kinda like the fellow that has never drank sauerkraut juice. He ain't much interested in whether it's good or vad. People just figure that there couldn't be so much corruption, or some of it would have come my way. And the fellow that has received any of it naturally he is in favor of a continuation of the policy.” el Tn THERE HAS BEEN a power of lovely campaign ammunition available for the Republican

rock-throwers, and the Democratic defense fis

nearly nil, The influence peddlers have been

. merrily at work, but it had mostly been petty

larceny stealing—what they got caught at, anyhow, The suspicion is that a flock of: the big thieves are still loose, but that is only a suspicion. - Offhand, you would say that while the deepfreeze scandals and the RFC fixes are pretty julcy stuff, they figure to evaporate with time.

* Charlie Lucey, a seasoned political .reporter, re-

cently made a swing around the country and he, like Will, found the people not so much incensed at general corruption in office, or at

‘some of the big and flagrant mistakes made by

the administration, What really burned ’em, according to Char-

" He, was the tax-fixing business between big

sinners and hte Trumanites. | - THE AVERAGE vier is never going to have ‘a ‘whack .at a corrupt buck, and his tendency is more. toward * envy of the slicker than imass indignation at the slicker’s misdeeds. If there is

*. corruption around, the man says, why thep I

will have some, please, and let me fatten my “coffers, too. . But tampering with his tax collectors and

© getting off from rightful tithes fries his hide,

because he knows that, as a small debtor, he“hasn't got a prayer to beat the. collector out of - ».-B Slime, They Boma. Nim for $22.35, 95 Vem thy

ale med,

ppened Last Night

Tie

‘Sheds Indiana Chill On Bermuda Sojourn

carrying case for only $12.50. The outside isn’t much to look at but inside—five fifths of V. 0. I have a very good friend in the newspaper business in Indianapolis who would enjoy the carrying case. on a tree once.

But the moment is now and what does that lovely young lady mean dashing so blithely past me? KEyen at this distance, 100 yards, I'm sure she wants to get acquainted. There is a trace of .boredom on hér pretty face. If those three brutes would step back I could see more boredom, perhaps. And her laughter, so forced, so strained. Must be a polite girl to put up with those refugees from a barbell colony. Surely she will tire of th maudlin attention she is receiving. and then she'll. be ready to come over and talk about her father's steamship line or plantations or any other idle conversation such as only. I can think of and be happy. Silly, silly girl. &» AH, BUT what do we have on yonder Gulf Stream? A cabin cruiser, no less, with four lovelies and two elderly gentlemen who probably are the crew members. Should I release my tootsies from the inch of sand and swim out? Four or five strong strokes should be sufficient to cover the 2000 yards that separate us. On the other hand, why rush things? Time stands ‘still in Bermuda. There is always a toOne does not hurry events in paradise, one merely plucks the fruit as it ripens. The best possible course to follow might he to do something spectacular. like catching a record white, marlin. This is the time and the record catch for men is only 128 pounds. All the world loves a sportsman and- 150 pounds of fighting white marlin would do it here. “Slow down, boy; breathe deeply, soak up the sun and relax. Erase completely from your mind this hit-the-ball attitude. Leave that for friends back home. Achievement on thege. islands is measured in smiles and gay laughter, smooth brows and a steady pulse, warm cheeks and dreamy music, carefree hours under the sun and stars,

oN

*, i Sn

WHAT IS WRONG with a plunge in the crystal clear water? Forget the girl with the musclemen and the cabin cruiser which probably leaks anyway. Later on, shower and shave and by that time the white dinner jacket will be back from valet service. An apertif or two before dinner will get the brain cells jumping. Eath moment should be thrilling as it enters eternity and they should be as plentiful as the grains of sand on the beach. What, what? Oh, hello Mr. No, I'm not going anywhere. Just browsing in the travel department. I know the services of Fletcher Trust Company travel department are at my disposal. I've got to go back to the office. I feel fine, thank you. Nice pamphlets. Must be

(Emil) Hopkins.

great to get away. Take care. That's my muffler, thanks, Curses. ’ Falgies Are Fine

For Tender Knees

THE MIDNIGHT EARL .:'. A customer at Toots Shor's bar had a bandage on his head. “What happened to him?” asked Eddie Hanley, the star. “Oh, didn’t you hear?” replied headliner Frank Gallop. “He called Toots ‘Tewts’.”

A hoodlum .claiming to be from the Detroit “air condition”

Purple Gang is here threatening to (shoot full of holes) a popular crooner for deserting the mob. . Redbook, which boasts that nobody over 35 gets in the mag, is edited by Wade Nichols, just 36. ... June Havoc, whose baby is due in the fall, expects to cease stage activity in the spring. . . . An intergational playboy doesn’t know that his Girl Friend is a “plant” from the Internal Revenue Dept,, who keeps a diary. . , . Sunny Walters is a singing hit at Danny’s Bagatelle. Gov. Dewey, a chess fan, had the knights, or horse's head pieces, on his special set replaced by an elephant (white) and a donkey (black). He always plays the white. . . . Eddie Cantor, a Democrat, told Lindyites he'll stump for Ike if he’s ~ ‘nominated. . . . Lou Suritz and Pat Coogan announced weddin’ plans at the Wm. Tell. .

Sunny Walters

. Judy Garland’ll vacation awhile before marrying Sid Luft (after she

leaves the Palace, Feb. 17).

ment: Martin & Lewis. <>

New possible replace-

»*> @ ABOUT OUR SNOW: “California weather,” said Milt Fenster. “The only people doing any business,” said a cab driver, “is Kleenex.” Said loyal New Yorker Lionel Hampton: “The greatest snow on earth.”

.WISH I'D SAID THAT: Gazing out a train window, noticing television antennae ‘replacing radio aerials, ad director Jim McKeon sald: “It's getting so you can’t see De Forrest for TV's.” : * Bh Bb WHAT WITH THE FLOODS in California, the only one who gets to the studios on time, says Hal Block, is probably Esther Williams. , , . That's Earl, brother.

GOP Would Do Well To Heed Will Rogers

Wholesale rottenness in the Bureau of Internal Revenue makes him madder than a muzzled actor, because he sees the big sinners greasing their way out of large chunks of

liabiligy. R:. $B Bb

EVERY MAN feels taxes today as he never knew he “would feel taxes. When Mr. Truman blithely checks off a budget he is no longer merely soaking the rich and clobbering the corporations. He is snipping another foot off the take-home of everybedy. In a very short time an average wage earner has seen a lot of luxuries and semi-luxuries taxed almost out of -reach, and he has watched his own bobtailed salary competing desperately with the cost of living. If there 1s a single slice of corruption the voting man will remember this fall, it's corruption in the Tax Department—and higher and higher and higher taxes, with Harry asking for money every whipstitch. Will Rogers was right. Wholesale corruption is not cinch campaign material, but I don’t: see how the tax issue can miss.

Dishing the Dirt By Marguerite Smith

Q—I've been doing a little work around the yard and around the dead peony stalks I have found. clusters of lady-bugs. Is this good? And are they common? I covered them up with leaves again and decided to ask what you thought. Mrs. HP. R., Bridgeport.

A—It's wonderful. That is, if you're sure these are the brick colored lightly spotted lady beetles and not their close (but dastardly) relatives the brighter brown, heavily black-spotted bean beetles. You usually see these latter ambling out under cover the minute the weather gets mild. But I'Ve never found lady bugs clus-

i

- Read Marguerite Smith's Garden Column in The Sunday Times

w ¥ PEIN 1% ‘tered ‘as you describe them. However they're such a help to the gardener that not too long ago California fruit growers imported one variety of lady bugs from Australia to .clean up an insect that was ruining their citrus orchards. Syn Westcott, the. well-known plant: doctor, Java g siigle oti Will eat Trou) 25 10 50 plant lice i a asic day. make & vod isi job for x 4 forsiad.

He writes a column and counted the leaves

(A check on this project might

The Indianapolis

Ship Locked Two Years

In Arctic Ice

WILLIAM H. RUDY Times Special Writer

IN THE more fanciful

By

days of Arctic exploration, there was a legend that an open, compara-

tively warm sea existed at the North Pole. Guarding this, said the legend, were the brutal Arctic seas and the ice floes, bent on keeping man from learning the secret lof the Pole. Fantastic as this is, there was a time when the sea acted as though it had a secret to preserve. For nearly two years it held in gn icy vise the barkrigged yachtg Jeannette. Never during that time did it completely take -away hope from the master and the crew, but in the end it let few escape. And when a rescue ship was sent to the Jeannette's aid, the elements acted more rapidly to repel it. ’ ” 5 » IT WAS July 8, 1879, when the Jeannette, 420 tons, put out through the ‘Golden Gate .and pointed north along the rocky California coast.

The Jeannette had been in the Arctic before. As the Pandora, she had felt the crush of ice floes on an earlier voyage, but now she was completely refitted and provisioned by James Gordon Bennett, publisher of the New York Herald.

The Jeannette's skipper was a 33-year-old Annapolis graduate, Capt. George Washington De Long, who also had made a polar trip. She was late in sailing and precious summer weather had heen lost. Once through the Bering Straits she went off her course to hunt for another explorer, then cruising in southern seas, and thus lost more time, ” ” y “ BY THE end of September the Jeannette was in the ice pack above Siberia and by November was frozen fast.

This was a different face of the sea. No long, powerful swells running to the horizon, no 40-foot waves breaking over the bow. But there were gales howling in the rigging and there was all the power of the sea frozen into ice masses. The silence of the Arctic wastes? Capt. De Long in his extensive diary, wrote of the crushing flow of ice:

“I know of no sound that can be compared to it. A rumble, a shriek, a groan and the crazh of a falling house all combined, might serve to convey the idea of the noise with which the motion of the ice floes is accompanied.” Hy - » GREAT masses as high as the ship slid along at crazy angles, carrying in them “confused masses of debris like a marble yard adrift.”

At times the sea held out hopes of escape. One entry read: “The grinding and the crushing flow of ice to the westward had again com-’ menced, and the jamming of large pleces from time to time, splintering our floe, caused breaks and upheavals

"THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1952

SR

THE END FOR THE JEANNETTE—As she sank below the icy Arctic Sea, her crew piled into boats and began an epic struggle

toward land.

EDITOR'S NOTE: The daring of Capt. Henrik Kurt Carlsen brings to mind other true adventures of the sea. For centuries man has dueled the powerful oceans, sometimes winning . . . and often losing. William Rudy in the third of a series of articles, today, takes us to the frozen Arctic, where more than one mariner met death cruelly.

»

to within 75 feet of our ship. . The ship groaned and cracked at. every pressure, until I thought the next would break her adrift.” The Jeannette never was to make it. Through the winter her company was buoyed by the belief that the summer of 1880 would free her. She had sprung a leak, and to conserve fuel her master and his chief engineer, Lt. George W. Melville, had rigged a windmill to power her pumps.

E J ~ - THE summer of 1880 was

more tantalizing than the win-*

ter. Efforts to free the Jeannette failed. Fall came and the ice floes ground and shrieked again. From time to time the relentless drift carried her past a rocky island. The winter of 1880-81 came and Capt. De Lorg’s diary discloses more hints of .despair. The sea was winning. It was the sameness of the days, he wrote, that was the most unbearable. The same shrieking ice, the same frozen seascape, the same bored companions. Two things happened in June of 1881, when the Jeannette had been gone nearly two years. There had been no word of her and Congress had ordered the Navy - vessel, Rodgers, to the search under Capt. Berry. That month, when the Rodgers sailed from San Francisco,

STALIN'S ‘MEIN KAMPF'—NO. 4

World War lll--Is The Creeping War

By DAVID SNELL : cripps-Howard Staff Writer JOSEPH STALIN is fighting

a creeping war—and counting upon the West to lose it by default. It is being fought in the colonial, semicolonial and dependent lands of Asia and the Middle East, and in Africa and South and Central America. The battle cry is “Death \to Imperialism.”

Throughout the primary target area, which is Asia and the

Middle East, Stalin is building revolutions by stages -—and hoping his enemies will not wake up to the fact until it is too late. For each country the revolutionary stages are three. They follow the classic formula that was tested successfully in China.

” y » “THE , distinguished feature of the first stage” , . . wrote Stalin, “is (that) ... it was directed mainly against foreign oppression:” ' Today, in Egypt, Iran, Iraq and Morocco, open and concealed Communists — with plenty of unwitting popular support—are howling for the scalps of foreigners. “Let us now proceed to the second stage,” Stalin dontinued. “. + . the distinguishing feature . . . is that the edge of the revolution is now directed against internal enemiles. . . .” In India,

“have turned on Prime Minister Jawaharlal Neliru, and made of "him the No. 1 bogey man. Nehru seems destined to become India’s Chiang Kai-shek. The third stage, wrote Stalin, fs the ‘“consélidation. of the dictatorship of the proletariat.” Then it is all over,

Middle East has been

where the British no longer rule, the Communists

THE FIRE burning in the. Tague at

ism

relentlessly by, Communist agents, This follows the classic blueprint, as set down in Stalin's unexpurgated “Marxism and the National and Colonial Question.” There, as elsewhere, Stalin feels confident of success. His confidence stems from a belief that the West will never accept the so-called backward nations as full and equal partners.

“National equality and , , friendly collaboration between nations,” he wrote, ‘“‘are unachievable and inconceivable under the rule of capitalism.” {t goes almost without saying\that the Communists shouting \the slogans of nationalism are insincere. The “Programme of the Communist International” is explicit on this point:

“When a revolutionary situation is \developing, the party advances, certain transitional slogans and . . . demands corresponding to the concrete situation; but slogans: must. be bent “to the revolutionary aim of capturing power.” \ ” o x ONCE in power, the Communists swiftly eradicate the nationalism = that helped bring them to power. The Russian theoreticiadt, E. A. Dunayeva, writes: . “If the survivals of national . +» are hot combatted, they may revive and cause considerable “hgrm. . . .

ese demands and

It must _

the end came for the Jeannette. On June 12 the spring flow of

ice pinched the ship more and

v

not. be forgotten that the re---actionary forces of the capi-:~

talist world that surrounds us ’

are trying by various ways and means to smuggle the corrupt bourgeois ideology “nto. country. . .. Soviet people must be. uncompromising in their hostility to all manifestations and survivals of nationalism.” . 80 much for the regard of Communists for nationalism,

our .

more. Her keel was warped to starboard, she broke near her boilers, her starboard stove in, and at 4 a. m. on June 13, the Arctic Sea had her.

THE SEA had not yet claimed the 33 officers and men. With five small boats, five sleds, dog teams and 7000 pounds of stores they began on June 17 an epic fight toward land.

Capt. De Long fixed the position of the disaster at 77 degrées, 18 minutes North, and 153 degrees, 42 minutes East, well over the Siberian land mass. Hope- of safety lay in reaching the mouths of the Lena River. 5 The floes were hummocks of sharp ice. They were streaked by open water, too narrow, most

of the gaps, for the use of boats, too wide for jumping. 2 » on 2

A WEEK passed and Capt. De Long made another fix. It showed them to be at 77 degrees, 46 minutes North. ‘A week of bitter working southward and the northway drift had - carried them 28 nautical miles farther north. Capt. De™ Long had kept the heart-break-ing fact from his companions. They went on and the northward ‘drift eventually stopped. The sea opened before them, it opened behind them, the streaks of clear water always east to west. The sea gave them no help in their push south. A diary entry read: “Today we have done very well, having made 1!2 miles.”

On Sept. 12 a gale heralding the approach of their third winter in the wastes separated the three boats as they: were

But what does if, matter If they are-insincere when they shout “Egypt for the Egyptians!”? They would shout that the moon is green cheese if it would help them win unwitting mass support among native populations. Without such support the cause of the revolution is lost. Stalin wrote: “The misfortune of the opposition in fact is that they do not recognize this simple Leninist rule for leading the millions: That . . . the party alone . without ‘the support of the millions, is incapable of accomplishing a revolution.” ~ n ”

THUS, in 1926, Stalin declared in a speech to the Chinese commission of the Communist International, while the Chinese revolution was in its first stage: “. . . the masses

» must be mobilized around the

Kuomintang and the Chinese Communist Party.”

Later, he explained:

“We always said that it was impossible to adopt the policy of discrediting and replacing the Kuomintang leadership before it had run its course as a bourgeois revolutionary overnment, and that it must rst be allowed to run its course before practically raising the question of replacing it.” As. an’ example of how the formula works today, consider the Philippines.

‘On July 4, 1946, the inde-

pendent Republic of the Philip- ~~

pines was proclaimed. in accordance with the Tydings-McDuf-fie Act passed by the Congress of the United States in 1934, While this obviously was in no= way the doing of Communists, it served to advance the revolu: tion in that fountry to the secs" ond stage. | a ‘

imes

cro¥sing a reach of open sea. The cutter commanded by a Lt. Chipp never was seen again, ” » ” - A SECOND boat led by Lt. Melville was cast up on the eastern delta of the Lena. Capt, De Long's party was landed on a treacherous shore far to the east,

The Melville party eventually reached a trading post on the tundra.

The rescue ship, Rodgers, meanwhile, had been given a quicker death. It searched that summer of 1881 for a ship already at the bottom, and finding nothing, retired to an anchorage outside the Bering Straits to await a new’ try the next summer. On Nov. 30 fire broke out in the forehold and the Rodgers burned to the waterline and sank.

Aboard the Rodgers was a reporter for the Herald, Willam H. Gilder. Capt. Berry gave Gilder what must have been the toughest assignment a legman ever got. He was told to go, with Eskimo guides, to the. nearest settlement with communications to the outside world. This, apparently, was on the Lena, more than 3000 miles away.

When Mme. Aurora Quezon, widow of the first President of the Philippines, Manuel Quezon,. was ambushed and slain by Communist-led Huk guerrillas

in April, 1949, a shock wave shuddered through the free world,

” » n MME. QUEZON was a symbol of Philippine independence. Her voice had spoken_eloquently against communism. Her assagsination was the sign that “the bourgeois revolutionary government’ had run its course, and that the Communists were “raising the question of replacing it.” Today, the Huk guerrillas, are a formidable striking force. Their operations are expanding. The Communist revolution in the Philippines is in its third and final stage.

In -all three stages of° that or any other. colonial-style Cdbmmunist revolution, wrote Stalin, “intense work must be carried on with concealed Communists.”

-.On that point, consider India. The Communists have endeavored ‘to plant their agents in the Indian government ‘at’ all levels. These agents can commit espionage, influence state policy in accordance with party line. and, when thg opportune time arrives, assist in the liquidation of non-Cammunist officiafs. All the while, the Chinese Red Army is poised to spring from Tibet. : 8 8 a HOW can these Communists be Sometimes we may suspect them by their deeds. Take, for example, Sardar K.M. Fania kar, India's Ambassador. Communist China and De rary member of the Indian

concealed identified?

“delegation tb the United Nae

Washington De Long (left), skipper of the Jeannette, and his chief engineer, Lt. George Ww. Melville.

the help of .

r=

PAGE TS

LEADERS — Capt. George

-

‘When Gilder reached ‘the Lena months later he learned of the Jeannette's fate.. He heard that Lt. Melville had organized a rescue party to go back for Capt. De Long. The captain's body was found on the rocky Arctic coast. His diary told his story. “For supper, half an cunce of alcohol,” read one entry. Another: “Too weak to carry the bodies of Lee and Kaach on the ice—carried . them round the corner out of our sight.” The last entry read: “Oct. 30, Sunday. 140th Day. Boyd and Gortz died during night. Mr, Collins dying.” Ld “ ~ IN ALL 22 persons had been lost to the sea. Capt. De Long's body with five of his come panions eventually was returned here by the government

~and buried in Woodlawn Cemae-

tery, Fifty-six years lafer scientists from the Soviet Arctic Station on Henriette Island found a splintered flagpole. With it was a copper tube holding part of Capt. De Long's diary of his losing fight with the Arce tic Sea.

Next: Capt. Fried Rescue,

a

to the

Mr. Panikkar has shown an alarming affection for the regime of Mao Tse-tung, the Red butcher of China. As recently as last October Mr. Panikkar was assuring his nation and the world that Mao does not toe. thegMoscow line. He praised Mao for setting in motion “a dynamic social revolution” by implementing our old pal, the agrarian reform. ° He hailed as an “achievement” Mao's establishment of a "powerful central governs ment,” and even defended China's aggression in Korea as “an aspect” of China's traditional interest in the peninsula. He said that in Korea Mao was not’ carrying out any particular Soviet directive.

” n 5

WHAT Mr. Panikkar failed fo report was Stalin's promise that Red China would “become a magnet for all the peoples of the yellow race ... a major power on the Pacific, ,, (and) a menacing threat for, ,, three continents.”

Nor did he report that Red China was assigned by Stalin the task of dealing India rhe coup de grace through the - -political and military role of the Chinese army. -

Whetlrey Mr. Panikkar actu. ally is. » Communist is impossible to say. It really doesn’t’ matter. He sorves a useful pur pose to communism. : You don't have to look too closely to find Mr. Panikkar's counterpart in Egypt, Iran and every other “country of the tre - get area. You'll find him in high places, calling for closer ties with the Soviet Union and openly antagonistic toward the West. World War III is the creeping _ war.

tle To u Tio} 3 3

sr