Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1952 — Page 19
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Washington Calling—
-Red Barbed Wire Going Up While ~ We're Politickin’
By Scripps-Howard Newspapers
WASHINGTON, June 21—The barbed wire is going
for contraband, Communist
up in Europe once more while American eyes are glued
on politics.
Europeans, their ears filled with din of Russian propaganda campaign for a Big Four conference on unifying Germany, are watching these Russian acts with
growing concern:
Construction of three-mile no man’s land between East and West Germany. Eviction of all residents. Rush construction of huge concentration camp for Germans who balk’ at leaving the no man’s zone. Planting of mine fields to seal off West from East. Erection of barbed wire barriers along the 600-mile
border.
Our people aren't sure what it means.
West Germans are sure
of one thing: Russian talk
of unity is fake. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer—who has most to gain from unification, most to
Jose if any chance for honest talks “is passed up, puts it this way. “These latest measures of the Soviet Zone regime prove the Soviet Union is not seriously seeking re-unification of Germany, but instead seeks to {isolate the East Zone of Germany with lies and untruth.” West has discovered one trick: In all the hubbub, Red spies, saboteurs, and strike agitators are “fleeing” with real refugees into the West.
Medical Mixup
. DEFENSE department employees familiar with North African air base construction scandal are puzzled as to why huge medical snafu there was overlooked by Senate .investigators. They say: ONE—More than three tons of medical supplies, worth at least $3. million and vitally
HATE EAA
~ TWO—Critical shortages re-
sterile bandages. Medical corpsmen lacked even ordinary scissors. THREE — Infections and other inadequately treated sicknesses have resulted in some 400 suits against Atlas Constructors, - Inc, five-com-pany combine building the bases. (Government underwriters group health insurance costs for defense contractors, so they're really suits against governntent). FOUR — Among equipment stolen were four portable Xray machines, two electrocardiogram machines. FIVE—A doctor on project claimed to be ex-U. 8. Army medical corps major, with New York’ University degree. Turned out he wasn’t a U. 8. citisen, didn’t show on NYU graduation rosters checked. Defense employees say they failed in efforts to have armed forces check rumor that stolen medical supplies were used in ¢ + private Casablanca clinic.
Other Probes
LIQUOR INDUSTRY Is worried about Chelf Committee hearings set for next week. Committee has been told, in closed sessions, that Justice Department investigation on monopoly practices by distilleries was choked off after -liquor interests contributed to 1948 campaign. It's pad timing for industry— which has been trying to get Congress to lower liquor taxes. King Committee staff is at work on alcohol tax unit of Internal Revenue Bureau; that makes industry edgy, too. Work will go on quietly, though Chief Counsel Adrian Dewind is leaving, and though public hearings are off till late summer or fail. Meanwhile, King Committee's one recommenda~ tion, to tighten up regulations on who may represent persons with tax troubles, is deader than doornail. Ways and Means Committee hiny told in up to revise it. RE thi than meets the eye to that story about Lester Luther, just removed as U. 8. Attorney for Kansas. Probes last year disclosed that Luther organized Rean oil Co. at Russell, Kas, for Larry Knohl and Frank Costello, acted as its resident agent. Knohl is fellow who paid T. Lamar Caudle $5000 for finding him an airplane; who acted as investigator for Samuel Aaron and Jacob Friedus, New Yorkers who pleaded guilty to evading taxes on black market operations; who's a friend of Frank Nathan, Pittsburgh gambler who figured in Teitelbaum shakedown story.
: Politics i: . GOOD OR BAD, last night's . Texas speech was Gen. Eigenhower's own, He had bushels
of ideas tossed at him, but finally dictated his own product to a steno, and that's what he delivered at Dallas. Next week looks comparaquiet on Ike's schedule. There’ll be television speech
8 n peace aims, public . Monday © Thursday
Denver youth’s role in world stre 8 . Ike's s think his ‘Denver m with
Western ons will pay off a iigatia Some still insist he must do more to spark campaign. Yet there's no set plan. It looks like he's playing by ear from here to GOP con-
vention. Against Guy - SOME Eisenhower supporters ‘in New Jersey want Re-
state's GOP . They complain that will glide on rollers along a Gabrielson likes Taft, used his single metal strip about 20 national chairmanship to help inches wide. ! Ohio Senator. GOP chairman “This strip in’ turn will be set 18 spond neutral. Gab- in concrete and the whole ‘rials convention track will be supported on con-
gave choice convention assigne ents ® Taft backers. ew Jersey State Chairma John J, Dickerson objects na ticularly to selection of Gen, MacArthur, a Taft supporter, as “neutral” keynoter. Gabrielson was renominated for committeeman last February, but action can be
changed any time before convention.
Democrat Talk
KEFAUVER — b st - prise of the 1952 get 3 po many delegates right now as he'll get, politicans here believe. The primaries gave him his delegates—and headlines. They're over now; the Tenhesseean is given little chance of picking up delegates chosen in state conventions. Those are run by ‘bosses, who don’t like
; Estes. casnivipeededutor. treatment. of WOLK:. .... But: with.240. deiogat CUTTS PAOTOB ome rome RIOT HL Ein SANE REC 31.1082, 0 eee Ba Ab tigges, there Were no... might. get: RE RTA" their glasses. Be suited. At SEE i —— Place on
ticket. : There's more “draft Stevenson” talk here than anything else. But Harriman takes his candidacy seriously, has a sizable bloc of delegates, may get y Stublors at Chicago if y try to jockey hi the Dicture. - ym oo kley talk hasn't sided; in fact, it’s ie
Super Caution
AIR FORCE says private that one reason it isn't ey ducing more planes is that Congress is always investigat0 see why i : gl y it isn’t making At Air Materiel Comman Dayton, Lt. Gen. E. Ww. an lings has imposed strict checks to guard against criticism by Johnson Preparedness Investigating Committee. He cut personnel authorized to 600 to 200. This slows things. deal ‘with contractors from He set up review machinery for ‘all contracts over $5000. (Used to be $100,000.) And he set up an office of inspection to spot-check on procurement. Subordinates complain they're afraid to make decisions,
Say It's Not So
DOCTORS are running a fever over Draft Director Hershey's gloomy picture of the health .of induction-age men. They say he distorts ran rejection figures, proes ammunition fo health insurance. 2 nations] Hershey told Congress 45 per cent of registrants were being rejected for physical, mental or moral reasons. Doctors say 16 per cent are rejected for failing mental tests, and that this includes illiterates; that 14 per cent turned down for physical reasons includes 4-F’s examined Several times, counted each time. Also that those who enlist are healthiest of all, don't show up in draft figures.
Gift Horse
REASONS why Phil Murray hesitates about accepting that $10 million offered his striking steel workers by John L. Lewis: y ONE—No big unions pay strike benefits; some union leaders think it would be dangerous precedent to divide money among the 650,000 men on strike (it would mean less than $16 apiece). TWO-—There’s suspicion in some quarters that Lewis of» fer .is part of an attempt to take over as head of all organized labor.
“World Report—
Peron Uses Undl
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
‘The Bull’ Breaks Up Koje's POW Camps
CAMP CLEANUP—Brig-Gen, Haydon L. (The Bull] Boatner, commandant of Koje Island's prison camp, has about cleaned out its notorious compounds. Of the 80,000 Red prisoners, more than 61,000 have sither been shifted to smaller, more manageable compounds, or have had their present quarters thoroughly searched propaganda, bodies of murdered fellow prisoners and home-made weapons. Gen. Boatner has announced that he has found the suspected "czar" of Koje, a fanatical Communist who masterminded the recent Koje riots and murders. Pictures show some of the clean-up operations.
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To Get World Steamed Up About ‘3d Force’
Propaganda Apes Kremlin -
Compiled From the Wire Services Argentina’s President Juan Peron appears dead serious in his aim to capture leadership of a “third force” movement in the world, Peter Lisagor, Times special correspondent, writes from Washington. His costly anti-Yanqui propaganda, already blanketing most of Latin America, has turned up in the Middle East, Austria and Ng Zealand. The propaganda, spread under the auspices of the govern-ment-sponsored General Confederation of Labor (CGT), is indistinguishable from the Communist brand, Mr. Lisagor says. It flouts. “Wall Street,” decries American “lynchings,” dreams up imaginary military plots by United States officers. Jts central theme is that the United States is bent on a program of economic imperialism, especially in Latin America. At the same time, Peron is trying to export his “justicialism.” This, in brief, is the Argentine version of “social justice” for the masses. It prescribes a
third position, somewhere be- .
tween industrial capitalism and communism. Special Appeal
It makes a special appeal to the neutral sentiments in those countries-which have achieved political independence but are still economically dependent and backward, declares Mr. Lisagor. The amount of money Argentina is spending on this anti-U. 8. campaign can only be guessed at. A labor attache in Panama is known to have received $50,000 for his propaganda operations alone during one recent period.
The primary propaganda target is labor. Labor attaches in various embassies
handle the outflow of bulletins, pamphlets, tracts. The CGT has attempted to organize an international arm called
Can the Roller Coaster Be Growing Up?—
Germans Get Further Away From Iron Horse
new train from the dragging
By DAVID M. NICHOL
COLOGNE, Germany, June 21 (CDN) ~—Sometime in Sep-* tember, if all goes well, a strange train will roll around an even stranger track which is being built in a secluded area near here. If the hopes of its designers are fulfilled, it may begin a major revolution in transport, solving a host of commuters’ and traffic reins and moving bulky freight at 200 miles an hour. Many of its details remain closely guarded secrets, but the idea essentially is this: JAInstead .of moving on twin tracks and energy consuming flanged wheels, the new train
height. Surface ‘traffic would move unhindered beneath it.
. #* » THE TRAIN itself is designed to hang over both sides of its single track. Its center of gravity actually will be below its roller wheels. Its designers say derailments will be impossible, ; The September “experiments will be with a “model,” but it .will be no toy. The first one will be 40 per cent of its proposed full size. The track is roughly oval, about a mile and" a quarter around, with inclines and curves much sharper -than would be encountered normally. It is about five feet above the ground at its lowest point. Backing the development is “a misty group of financiers insome in the Uni
~ appears
the Latin America Committee of Syndical Unity (LACSU), without impressive results to date. These attaches have arranged free trips to Argentina for journalists, labor leaders and students. Bounced by Ecuador From reports reaching Washington thus far, other Latin American countries are scarcely falling over their heels to embracg this Peronista export. One country, Ecuador, recently sent the Argentina ambassador packing for his interference in Ecuadorian affairs. ~ In fact, there is some evidence that elements in South America fear Peron imperial: ism as much as anything else, Mr. Lisagor says. Other reports indicate ineffectual results of the whole campaign, fn some cases bordering on ridicule. But what Peron obviously hopes for—and Washington officials fear—is that the Argentina prescriptton may find takers if protectionist tendencies grow here and Latin countries begin to feel they're not getting a square shake for their tin and copper and other commodities.
This feeding already exists in many quarters south of the
-
border, according to all accounts. Favorite Target In its anti-Yanquism, the
CGT propaganda artists have missed few tricks. President
Truman is a favored target, with crude cartoons depicting him in various unsavory episodes. They also have attempted to lampoon Margaret Truman's singing. One bf their most fantastic recent concoctions had to do with what ' they called the “Benson plan.” This they attributed to a Gen. Benson, who was alleged to be in Mexico plotting the military subjugation of all Latin American countries which refused to bow to U. 8. policy. The only Benson that Amer=
the jaw-breaking name -Ver-kehrsbahn-Studiengesellschaft. - . »
SPIRITUAL GRANDADDY of the new design is another famous German train, the 50-year-old “hanging railroad” of Wuppertal, a picture of which in , Its cars are sus-
. Bsc ( pended from ~ overhead rails
and run for much of their course above the canal-lake Wupper River. The designers of the new train were eager to get away from overhead steel structures and to make use of concrete. The single track design, they feel, will do away with much of the power loss which results from double tracks and flanged wheels, and give extra . It will make possible more rapid acceleration braking. ... ; ELEVATION will traffic unhindered
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ican officials could find was a Col. Benson, who had been _retired for 10 years and whbse only experience in Mexico was with “Black Jack” Pershing in 1917.
West Germany
WEST GERMANY'S two largest parties, the Christian Democrats and the Socialists have demanded an immediate Big Four conference on German re-unification. Socialist Leader Kurt Schumacher said his party demanded the West German government take the initiative in bringing about “the rapid start of four power talks.” The executive of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer’'s Christian Democrats approved a resolution at a Berlin meeting asking the Big Four to start talks on Germany.
Tunisia
FRENCH AMBASSADOR HENRI BONNET conferred for 30 minutes with Assistant Secretary of State Henry A. Byroade on the Tunisian prob1 and other Near and Middle. Eastern issues. His visit followed Paris reports that the French government is going ahead with a new reform program for Tunisia.
Austria
AT LEAST one official of the Czechoslovakian legation in Vienna has been charged by his government with embezzlement of legation funds, Austrian government officials said.
Italy
A CATHOLIC WRITER charged that two United Nations agencies were influenced to some degree by “anti-Cath-olic poison,” Communist sympathies among certain officials and a type of atheism fostering birth control and abortion, The article by Jesuit Father Andre Retif criticized the United ® Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the World Health Organization
(WHO).
WORTHINGTON, England, June 21 (UP) — Elsa Ivor’s bicycle wavered uncertainly when she felt something pop and she was forced
to make a major decision. If she stayed on her bicycle it meant riding through a stop sign. If she got off as required by law she was almost certain to lose some of her undergarments. The 18-year-old art student stayed on the bicycle. She was fined $2.10 for passing the stop sign. She toll the court she was so embarrassed she could not bring herself to tell the policeman who stopped her what happened “It won't happen again,” she promised the court. “I shall use stronger elastic.”
Sweden UNIDENTIFIED planes violated Swedish territory last Monday, the same day Russian jets shot down an unarmed Swedish plane over the Baltic, the defense staff said. The disclosure that unidentified planes —not Swedish—flew high over eastern Sweden followed an earlier announcement that another mystery plane violated Swedish territory Tuesday near the west coast town of Halmstad.
Soviet Union
THE OFFICIAL newspaper Pravda denounced the “beastly attitude toward women” of a construction engineer in Tula who listed his nine wives in three categories — official, unofficial and semi-official. Pravda unmasked the polygamous advéntures of Innocentius Dimitriyevich Sakhno, the chief municipal construction engineer in Tula who was known locally as a Bluebeard. The newspaper said Sakhno lived like a feudal grand duke and kept a catalogue of his numerous wives and children because he could not remember all their names. ,
. ol Great Britain THE Coronation of Queen
- Elizabeth II in June, 1953, may
air turbulence which develops around trains at high speeds on the ground.
Controls can be built into the train, the brothers say, to halt the train instantly should there be a track failure or sabotage, and to prevent the trains from approaching too close to each other.
The first model will be controlled manually, but for the future the designers see these
_stream-lined: monsters moving ‘at 200 miles an hour over vast
distances and controlled remotely by éngineers in towers like those of airfields, It has not been decided where the first fullscale train will be constructed, if the ex-
. periments are successful, but
the Ruhr industrial area in Germany is a likely spot. Its and antiquated thar. ‘systems are Ii need des- . of some radical im-‘
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open the first international television hook-up. British Broadcasting Corp. television director George Barnes said, “France, Holland and West Germany — where TV starts this fall—-want to televise the coronation. This could be the beginning of a European network.”
Guatemala
PRESIDENT JACOBO .ARBENZ warned anti-Commu-nists and other opponents of the government land reform program that his leftwing regime will deal harshly with anv further disorders. In a radio broadcast, Col. Arbenz charged that “grave crimes” of the opposition have created an “uneasy situation” in Guatemala. ; At least six. peasant supporters of the government have been killed in ‘‘disturbances” this month, Interior Minister Ricardo
Chavez announced that at least
seven persons have been ar-
PAGE 19_ Our’ Fair. City— - bi,
Pro Craig Stand - Gets Legion Post Into Hot Water
By THE TIMES CITY STAFF BROAD RIPPLE POST 312 .scuttled
a A i Hera!
Legion's “no politics” rule in its June newspaper: came out with an editorial supporting former Le Commander George Craig for Governor. in Legionnaires all over the North Side, Republicans as well as Democrats, blasted this clear cut violation of Legion's by-laws and constitution. 3 Legion headquarters, harassed by indignant letters y+ and telephone calls, is about to crack down on the post. I State Commander Gilbert Bates, Warsaw, has ordered the ,; post paper to retract the editorial. a But the political damage is done. No amougt of re--,. tracting will ever convince some of the Democratia _. Legionnaires the veterans organization is not being used _
by the Republican Party.
Some Democrats have threatened to quit. an Here's the payoff. The Democrat who stands the best chance of winning the nomination for Governor :
Tuesday is John A. Watkins, former past commander of the Indiana Legion. And he's not particularly happy about the Craig indorsement. For years, Legion has been accused of being a political organization. In politically-intense Indiana, the charge is frequently heard. There are a number of politicians, Democrats as well as Republicans, who have used the Legion as a springboard to political fame and fortune. Some of the more active Hoosier Legionnaires in politics beside Craig and Watkins are two former Governors, Republican Ralph Gates and Democrat Paul V. McNutt.
"Others are Frank McHale, re-
cently deposed Democratic boss of Indiana, and Elmer (Little Doc) Sherwood, behind the scenes power in the Republican
codba. aftortel KaY,
£
“Past National Commander George N. Craig will be your next Governor of Indiana, if
every Legionnaire will NOW °
PLEDGE to WORK and GET OUT THE VOTE this fall. “Remember, it is your God given right to vote; it is your duty to vote; and with George N. Craig, YOU as a Legionnaire, can find no one better qualified, more capable to place in charge of your great state of Indiana.” Editor of the Broad Ripple Post is Lyman C. McCaskill. Post Commander Arlie Wells told The Times “the editorial was not the opinion of the post.” He said it was just a case of one man getting “overenthused.” Commander Wells
said the paper will print a retraction in the next issue.
Call Me a Taxi
THERE WAS, a taxicab strike in Indianapolis last week that went unnoticed by the 2
§ a oy £3 .
newspapers and the rest of the city.
Here's the lowdown. It happened on the Kentucky Ave. side of the Lincoln Hotel Thursday. Three empty taxis sat at entrance of hotel and refused to accommodate passengers. The cab drivers were all sitting in one cab, a motorcycle cop chatted nearby with hotel doorman. Cause of the strike: game.
Diploma or Dough PUBLIC SCHOOL teachers yelped out loud last week when they saw a graphic demonstration of how their pay compares with unskilled labor. A 16-year-old youth was hired by the city’s teaching system as a laborer, His pay was $55.20 a week. Although the high school youngster goes to work with a summer vacation “permit” his pay just about equals the pay of oné of his teachers. . But his teacher must have a college diploma and at least four years of actual teacher training. A teacher, unable to simply ignore the tugs on her Jpurse
Card
strings and time, finds that at -
the end of the year her.pay was far less than $3150 shown on paper and her hourly pay rate was nothing to write home about.
Aching Backs
SIZZLING weather last week end nearly broke down soft-drink truck drivers and helpers, who have to tote those heavy cases all day. Their pay rises in proportion to loads, but there's a physical limit. Man who services drink machines at police headquarters estimated he distributed 300 cases . a day, which meant handling each 40-pound case four times. That's well over two tons daily, not to mention taking back “empties” which weigh around -30 pounds.
‘Justices Triumph
CITY POLICE are investi-
gating’ reports the Indiana Magistrates been soliciting money
© private detective agencies,
3 the controversy. Phe “yyy #5” shall “good caat-dztesrrmbelongoie Sr cos uc: Aide. Yo shoW good fait Post JIT News: 5 -
Association has trom -
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Persons solicited said they ! were told money they gave for membership and to advertise in a publication “goes to help our 52 Judges. . . .’ Broad implica: tion that it wouldn't “hurt” in case the businessman had to appear before the judges. i» Police called operators from : Ohio and salesmen in for cons ference this week. The operas"! tors denied they had been try ing to sell police protection, said it might have been over. ~ enthusiasm on part of salese "= man. They agreed to suspend operation until some Hoosier Justices of the Peace who form the “magistrates” part of the group meet to elect officers and convene here July 14, 3 This is typical of a number of other business groups and I points up Indiana’s loose = : corporation laws. Anyone, it -
Fo
-Pays- eT -
JUNE 21 issue of Saturday Evening Post carried full page © (p..77) advertisement by. Atlas Tires and Battery about license plates from various states. The Indiana plate is AK-4920. In’ checking the advertisement. Times man found Hoosier plate belonged to Bill Engler, man< | Tr of general advert - The Times, Bing or 3
Pregnant Situation
WOMAN EXECUTIVE at an’ Indianapolis social wel fare agency got a call from a serie _. Zus-voloed, adult-sounding oman - who sai - tantly: 4 ry bmg i “I was told to call this number. Can you tell me... that is... do you give out information on pregnancies?” 1d Thinking it might be a case to-be referred to agency helpe ing unwed mothers or adoptions, the social agency gal an~ swered “yes” and the caller. continued, even more haltingly; 2 “Well, I want to know ., , where do you get babies?” af The caller explained her mother would not explain the biological facts of life . .. sha>! had no friends to ask. na7 Agency referred her to a S0- : cial hygiene group where they
Bre still anxiously awaiting her call, ayy
TV Blues
LOCAL promoters com E plain | that television is killing sports in Indianapolis. Among the groaners are softe ball people, stock car race opers
ators and even professi " baseball moguls, P onal
In the Middle
BUSINESS experts say dianapolis is in a period of eco='nomic stability, yi Local businessmen have another name for it—slump. But the experts explain this is not true, They claim we are not! in a depression and not in a recession—we're in the middle. No matter what you call it, '*’ though, local businessmen don't “i* like it. They note how slow: items are moving, how small .. paychecks are. oA And the workers notice that" ’ they aren't getting as much overtime as usual. It's like normal. And they don't like it. Not after the big pay days.” *
Trolley News >
IS A, TRACKLESS trolley subject to the same traffic laws other vehicles must obey ar 4 does public transportation get special favors? es This posed a question for a | Southwest Side resident last week. an Paul Patterson, 3801D Pleass .. ant Run Blvd, said he nearly was struck by a trackless trols ley at Chester and Washington Sts. he thought ran a red light.. 5 Mr. Patterson pointed out the ' * apparent violation to a motors 7° cycle policeman who chased the trolley, stopped it but failea to give a sticker to the operator. Mr. Patterson said he was .. told trolleys are exempt from trafic laws. “1 Gy Police Chief John Ambuhl immediately said that is not true. : . Under the new municipal code, the chief said, trolleys = fhust obey the law like any other vehicle. og The chief promised to i
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