! l . f s , , - ; -,1-L-jj jj, HMMaMaivHMMH if !iimo-mtwKwuwjwiytoW4&i iniiH'im m mmmaKtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmm pMrvnHHVMHiMnHHMMaM , - lit" I J -v . 111 mmmmmmimmmmmm..M mi n ni i mm- 1 mr..m m ,mr, n mi i i i.i i , n A Another Big Four 'Peace 9 Conference BRITAIN, France and the United States have agreed to a pre liminary meeting in Paris March 5 of: deputies o draft an agenda for another Big Four conference of foreign ministers. The U. S. State, Department termed "absurd" a Soviet proposal to limit the parley solely to a discussion of German rearmament. Moscow grudgingly consented to discuss other subjects but is insistent that German mili tarism be the top topic. The basic view in Washington is likely to remain unchanged. That is if the Politburo really wants peace the proof must come in action, not words. The latest public pronounce ment of Premier Stalin is viewed in this light. Stalin Interview In his Pravda interview, Stalin maintained that only Russia and her satellites were following the road to peace. He denounced the United Na- ' tions majority and predicted defeat for U.N. forces in Korea unless they accepted Communist China's terms. t He claimed that Russia had disarmed j since the war and charged that west ern democracies under American leadership were rearming to attack Russia. Gen. J. Lawton Collins, U. S. Army hief of staff, told a joint session of the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services Committees "we know quite certainly Russia has 175 to 200 divisions" and many more from the satellite countries. . Gen. Collins pointed out that Soviet divisions have a strength of 12,000 to 14,000 men and those on active duty would equal in manpower about 110 American divisions. Four U. S. Divisions In contrast, the President is said to have approved sending of four addi tional U. S. divisions to Europe in connection with the build-up of Eu rope's defense armies under Gen. Eisenhower. Four U. S. divisions with rupporting troops would be About 100,000 men. The State Department went out of - its way to puncture Stalin's "myth" that the Russians have curtailed their war machine. In a 2,000-word report, entitled "Recent Soviet Pressures on Germany," it charged Russia has "35 fully armored or mechanized divi sions in east Germany and Poland alone." Rails Come Back In addition, it said, Russia has re stored east German railways which they dug up and hauled away imme diately after V-E Day. These rail ways, the State Department pointed out, would be. vital -supply lines in the event of war with the west Gen. Collins explained the west would not try to match the Russians in number of divisions. He said the Atlantic Treaty powers need a ground force in Europe sufficient to hold the Russians until the full weight of Al lied air, sea, industry and manpower could be brought to bear. Economics World Production World trade and production was higher in 1950 than ever before, ac . cording to a United Nations survey. Using the year 1937 as a norm, U.N. statisticians figured world industrial production in 1950 at 160. U.S. and Canadian production was 180 and British 122. The report rated industrial pro duction in Russia at 250, using the 1937 rate as 100. Western Germany barely reached 100 again while Japan had 70 per cent of its prewar pro duction. While the industrialized countries made big strides, .undeveloped coun tries did not share in this prosperity end made little if any progress, the report says. It found the two most serious eco nomic problems confronting the world today as the threat of inflation and impending shortages, of goods result ing from the Korean war. U.N. economists said three im portant features of international trade during the past year were: 1. Slashing of imports from the U5. in many countries. 2. Expansion of trade among non dollar countries. 3. Return to prewar standards of" living in many lands. Sidelights O In Champagne, 111., a college pro fessor whose annual salary never was more than $6,000 left almost $1,000,000 to the University of Illinois in his wflL The late George A. Miller, a noted mathematician, lived frugally and acquired his, fortune by buying stocks and bonds.. O In Baltimore, a convict serving a 20-year term for robbery, escaped through a tunnel under prison walls it took him two years to dig. O In Pittsburgh, local streetcar and has firms boosted fares for the fourth time in three years, from 12 to 13 and 3i cents per token. O In Hungary, men found physically unfit for military service must pay an annual tax of $20 to $50 until they reach the draft-exempt age of 36. The Russians probably are ahead of Americans in building atom bomb shelters, according to UJS. Civil De fense Administrator Millard Caldwell. At Selfridge Field, Mich, the Air Force ' is giving pilots refresher courses in how to drive automobiles. They found that jet pilots, skilled at ' 00 to 600 mile an hour speeds in the air, were too prone to highway acci dents.' - tAU Rights Butmd. 4JP tfwf Love Romeo Jailed A five-judge court sentenced Crete's modern Romeo to two years in jail foil carrying arms illegally last August when he whisked away the daughter of a rival clan leader. Both embittered families promise grimly the last act of this modern Shakespearean drama has not been played Whether it will be a tragedy or comedy is still to be revealed. The Romeo is dashing, mustachi oed Costa Kephaloyannis, 32, and his Juliet iis dark-eyed Tassoula Petra cogeorgi, 19. Both Costa and the girl he j wooed and won on the legendary mountain playground of the Greek gods were embittered by the verdict. Costa hinted he might try to es cape to the mountains and operate as a guerrilla as he had done during the war against the Nazis. Tassoula, who expects a baby soon, sobbed that she wanted only her hus band. She has vowed never to give up Costa despite her father's opposi tion. The bride's angry father, George Peracpgeorgi, prominent Liberal member of the i Greek Parliament, snorted that twb years in jail for leading an armed; gang was a "farce." He was quoted as saying "this verdict will force me to ithe mountains." Costa said essentially the same thing. Both statements were in terpreted as meaning the pride of both families had suffered and that vindictive action! was not excluded. WHO'S BLEEDING WHOM? Dates l Tuesday, February 27 Rural Education Department j(NEA) meets in Atlantic City. Thursday, March 1 Red Cross Month starts. Anniversary i (84th). U.S. De partment of Education. Friday, March 2 Texas Independence Day. Saturday, March 3 National 4-H; Club Week starts. Anniversary! (60th), first In ternal Revenue Tax Law. 111,1 .. o. ;( " - u " ' - " - .. . :-.v'.:""-:-'.-..v.: s ' . ' . ., .: w.::'--5.':-:;Ai' . , ... - ' Htm - -it- n- iMiiMi ifimuar 1 1 1, m, m ,n PRESIDENTIAL LOOK-SEE Mr. Truman examines Army's new T-41 Bulldog tank at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. The tank has been named for Gen. Walton Walker, killed in Korea. f 1 : U UU WryLNUbl U UUUi) V LblDU ,e7 . . -i - t KOREA: New Tactics THE battle-hardened GI in Korea is fighting a different kind of war now than last sum mer. In factj this is the third dis tinct American tactic since North Korean invaders swept down across the 38th Parallel eight months ago. GIs call it "Operation Broom." They sweep the countryside clean of the foe as they advance. There's no more bypassing pockets of resistance. The advance is slow in terms of real estate won back but the goal this time is wiping out enemy manpower. Toe-Hold Defense The first military tactic adopted by American forces in Korea was purely defensive. The second was the lightning thrust of armored columns in the breakout from the! Pusan beachhead. An integral part of this campaign was the landing at Inchon, a rapier thrust far in the rear of the North Korean front. These break-and-run tactics con tinued until the iYalu River border with Manchuria was reached. They seemed on the verge of succeeding when entry of the Chinese Commu nists made it a brand new war. The current strategy was adopted after the rollback before Red China's tremendous manpower. Lt. Gen. Matthew B Ridgway, U.S. Eighth Army commander, is running this kill-as-you-go : show. His methodical annihilation cam paign has cost the Reds an estimated 106,666 casualties from ground alone in the last three weeks. That's an average of 4,637 Reds killed, wounded or captured every day. York, tovisvilfa Times Wounded Medical Advance Ninety-eight per cent of the wounded American soldiers treated in Korea recover, says the Surgeon General's Office. In World War; IL the percentage was 96. In World War I, it was 92. CoL Laurence A. Potter, assistant chief of Medical Plans for the Surgeon General, says five factors contribute to this steady rise in care of casual ties. They are:J blood transfusion; new drugs such as penicillin and auromycin; specialist services, ability to evacuate casualties quickly by air. ARMY ' - 4 f - ' - , - I f S . ; j. ' " - f ! "mi ii iiiiiiiriiiiiir ii M iiiiin if Tmrtkv-ie iiimimWmmtomitim&emimmmmmimtitmmmimmirim m wmwimiwmmmwmwww mmmw w THE ROAD BACK U. S. Engineers improvise temporary spans bypassing bombed-out bridges. One reason for adoption of this strategy is that the Chinese have succeeded in bringing the war down to a manpower level. They have ma neuvered in such a way to escape the tremendous Allied superiority in air power and firepower. Night Tactics This is how they do it: For the most part, Chinese troops and transport move only at night. Expert camouflage has enabled them Science Space Travel Designs for a space ship to carry; two men to the moon, land there and: return have been completed, says a: guided missiles expert at the Navy's; big test center at Port Mugu, Calif.; Arthur V. St. Germain, senior test; engineer for Fairchild at the guided; missile base, said the design, while! not in production, is practical with the application of techniques already; in use.- The fact that he was permitted i to talk about it at all indicates the; craft is not an immediate project. The space ship would tower 325; feet into the air above the launching: site, weigh 180 tons and attain a speed : of 25,000 miles an hour. Power would i be provided by four rockets, one tele-; scoped inside the other, which would drop off one by one as the shipi roared up through the earth's gravi- tational layers. The fifth rocket, containing the i crew, would coast to the moon once j it reached outer space. Its fuel would i be conserved for the trip home. The return journey would require : far less fuel because the moon, being ; smaller than the earth, has little ; gravitational pull. St Germain said the landing on ; the moon would be made tail first, with jets and rockets acting as brakes. ; In Short. . . Fined: By Federal Judge Edward A. Tamm, the Brotherhood of Rail- way Trainmen, $75,000 on its guilty i plea to contempt of court charges arising from "sick" strikes in the ; Potomac freight yards. Lifted: By the government, its ban i on copper for home water systems ; effective March 1 for a limited pe- '. riod to help home builders. Indicted: By the Middlesex County, NJ, grand . jury, the Pennsylvania Railroad on 84 counts of manslaugh ter, one for each of the fatalities in the Woodbridge commuter train wreck February 6. Estimated: By the Census Bureau, U.S. population at 153,085,000 on Jan uary 1, 1951. CHIEF Gen. J. Lawton Collins wnjjiw nuiran campaign praws air anu vmwgv was iuuiki itivrauy irozvn siur wua iiuniuii sea power, alone, couldn't halt Red invaders. of 64 degrees, lowest aver recorded for patient who lived. Against the Reds to conceal the build-up of supplies and reinforcements from Allied air attack. Generally speaking, Chinese Red attacks come after dark. The com munist troops swarm into Allied lines in waves, driven by an iron discipline and the typical Asiatic disregard for the value of individual life. The first waves, of course, are practically sui cide attempts. The Communist goal is to create a confused front. Once that is accom BASKETBALL: Court Game College Scandal For years basketball was one of the more popular college sports. Foot ball played to bigger crowds in huge outdoor stadia but all over the land basketball fans were being turned away from little jam-packed gymna siums and National Guard armories. The building of big indoor arenas like Madison Square Garden in New York made it possible for basketball teams to play before larger crowds than ever before. With attendances of 16,000 to 20,000, college basketball went big time and began to attract a following far bigger than their stu dent bodies and loyal alumni, i What happened in New York oc curred in other big cities. There are monster sport palaces like the Gar den in Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Francisco and elsewhere. Huge Gate Receipts Some colleges like New York's Co lumbia University refused to play off campus but for many colleges in big cities the big arenas looked like a godsend. The appeal was strong. There was a percentage in huge: gate receipts and all the college alumni and student body could get in to see the game. i The big amphitheaters made j pos sible intersections! basketball games. Soon colleges away from the; big metropolitan centers had to send their teams on cross country tours if ;they wanted a national ranking. Six years ago the bribe first reared its ugly head in college basketball. In 1945, two gamblers offered five Brooklyn College basketball players $1,000 to throw a game to Akron University in Boston. The game; was never played; the fixers got a year in jail and the players were expelled. Fixes' Are Not New I A year ago, Dave Shapiro, co-captain of the George Washington Uni versity team, turned in four gam blers who tried to bribe him before a game in Madison Square Garden with Manhattan College. The four gamblers were given prison terms. On January 16 of this year Man hattan's Negro center, Junius Kel logg, said five men tried to give' him fells REMARKABLE PATIENT Mrs. plished. Allied artillery has no well defined target. Allied gunners can not tell whether they are shelling friend or foe. It's almost routine procedure now for Allied artillery and bombers to operate at night by' the light of flares set off by GIs on the ground. But until the U.N. forces are able to pull back out of contact with the foe, it is difficult for the Air Force and ar tillery to throw their full weight into the battle. EX-CONVICT BOOKED - Salvo tore Sollazo hides behind hat In police station after his arrest for bribing college players. $1,000 to throw the DePaul game at the Garden. Manhattan won in an up st, 62-59. Two of the arrested would-be fixers were Henry E. Poppe and John Byrnes, co-captains of Manhattan's team the previous year. Police said Quotes Alvin Roth, suspended C.CXN.Y. basketball player after con fessing that he took bribes to "fix" games: "We were the WTiiz Kids last year. I guess we are the Fizz Kids now." Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Ilershey, Selective Service director: "An arrow won't kill as many people as an atom bomb but that didn't help . the poor guy hit by the arrow. If you are hit by an atom bomb, you'll have lots of com pany (but) youll be no deader than if you were killed by an arrow." Dorothy Mae Stevens, 23, of Labor & ense "CHDUR labor leaders stalked to X t ie White House for a confer ence With President Truman. They were upset about the nation's mobilization program and they wanted something done about it. They .Wanted a more active share for labor j in policy determination. They said tiie nation's mobiliza tion effort had been placed in the hands! of a few men from Big Busi ness. hThey charged these men with believing . they had a monopoly on experience, good ideas and patriotism. In ihort, they said, "not a single policy design so far has reflected in any way the recommendations o la bor ok" any ether group."' A week ago, the three labor rep resentatives on the Wage Stabiliza tion Board walked out. One reason organized labor, de mands more say on homefront poli cies than it had in World War II is its new-found unity. - ' Joint Action Las December IS the onions set tip a United Labor Policy Committee. John L. Lewis cf the United Min Workers did not take part. The committee is made up of five top AFL men, five top CIO men, two leaders of the Internationa Associa tion of Machinists and two from the Railway Labor Executives Associa tion. These groups represent perhaps 15 million union workers. As a result of the White -House conference, " Mr. . Truman named Charles S. Murphy, his special coun sel, to work with the labor leaders about the pre gram tbey laid before him. Nar. ling of a labor man as a deputy to Charles E. Wilson, the defense mo bilize, is being considered. Such a labor representative, would have, equal rank with Wilson's other dep uties, Sen. Lucius D. Clay and Sidney Weinberg. s Day in Court they admitted "dumping several game: the previous years in return for a total of $5,000 each, Lask week college basketball was rocked with its biggest scandal in his tory. jSalvatore Sollazzo, 43-year-cld ex-convict, was arrested charged with bribing players on college teams in and about New York City. Dishonor Soil Three star players on the College of the City of New York admitted accepting about $11,000 for fixing games this season against Missouri, Arizona and Boston College. They were Co-captains Edward Warner and Edward Roman and Alvin Roth. Harvey (Connie) Schaff. New York University player, was under arrest for offering a bribe to a teammate to throW a game. Four players at Long Island Uni versity admitted taking about $18,500 for fixing seven games, three - in the. 1 $49-50 season and four this sea son. The four were Sherman White, LeRoy Smith, Adolph Bigos, captain of this year's team, and Eddie Gard, captain of the 1949-50 team. Not all of the "fixed" LIU games were lost. The players sought to win, but not by more than six points. The fixed games and scores were: North Carolina State 55, LIU S2. Jan uary 17, 1S50; Cincinnati 83, LIU C5, February 23, 1950; Syracuse 80, LIU 52. March 11, 1950 at tha National Invitation Tournament; .Kansas State University 59, LIU 60, December 2; 1950; Denver 56, LIU 53, December 7, 1950; lldaho 57. LIU 59. December 25, 1950; Bowling Green 63, LIU 69, Jan uary i, 1951. TheL. players under arrest if con victed face fines of $10,000 and jfcil terms! of one to five years. AH were suspended by their colleges. CCNY decided to play out its sched ule but LIU suspended all intercol legiate sports. , Work In Defense of Griping "Whistle While You Work" un doubtedly is a better song title Chan an index of business efficiency, say researchers at the University cf Michigan. - A four-year study of plant and factory employes shows (hat "grip ers" usually are better workers than -whistlers."" The study was made by the univer sity's j Institute of Social Research, which reports: "While this type (the griper) will often spend a lunch hour denouncing his jdb, the driving urge to succeed will send this same subject back to work! fired with more productive en ergy.? ; ' . ' An! executive for the Insurance firm, jf or whom the "project was per formed, said: "On the basis of the study, it may be that instead of firing a roan who threatened to punch his boss in the nose, we should have pro moted him." - Additional findings of the survey: Management efforts to keep work ers happy with athletic and recrea tional programs produce no discerni ble benefits. ; Prodding of slow worker by fore men usually doesnt help much. Old fashioned suggestion boxes are of doubtful value. - .- Whether an employe worker lies bis boss makes little difference in bis production. -