Labor & i. - Tfo )hm Will DC i S I - - : i . i.,..---. . vyj v I . - -. ,!":. :-: .. .. . k-- 4 ' - .- 1 v .. .' - ' . .... ,.: '':" .:.. f " " , ' ' ' , -v' ',' :i ;. : r -.i . :.. . :,:; .-. , ..ji:,....,. " ' :V: - ( J . -J , -'' ' ' - : X i , ! a - S -- jL2Tf: .' .... - FOOTPOWEX Muck and slim slow but do not stop th Infantry. GIs fight on from wafer-filled foxholts, reptlling Red attacks. y .- . a 9 : : HORSEPOWER Spring thaws affect tha heavily mechanized United Nations forces much more than the Chinese Communists. s - - If.- -r y x. PAIN This CU shot In the mud, is treated In the mud. He prob obly won't be really clean until flown to a base hospital in Japan. ym Him ... mm.m "5 !Yc,Jf'"!-, t It v 7 I. DEATH The dirty end of a dirty war came to this U. S. Marin in a roadside, ditch near Hoensong on the central Korean front. " ci . . . V 'U. - V III "" L"' '" "tT6 11 J Monday, Mixeh 12 " Birthday (39th), Girl Scouts. Anniversary (63rd), Blizzard ot 1888. -,!-,.;. ,f : ; Tnesday. March IS Anniversary (57th), Standard Time. , ' !p-:;.i.' r"i-, Thursday, MartB 15 4 ? Deadline, Federal Income Tat Saturday, March 17 St Patrick's, pay. , f y Sunday, JWarch IS Palm Sunday. National Wild Life Week start. If Sitting Ducks jf The United Nations forces in Korea, says an AP correspondent, ere openly contemptuous ot enemy air power despite the fact that Red China is believed to have up to 3,000 combat planes, including fighters and medium bombers. ; His dispatch, cleared by MacArthur censors, points out that World War II lessons learned at Pearl Harbor and elsewhere have been forgotten by American air and ground fbrces in Korea. 1 1 Spotted From the Air These are some! of the things he noted on a flight over the front lines: Allied units camped brazenly along river bottoms and!; in exposed valleys sitting-duck targets for air attacks. ' - Airfields jammed with fighter, bomber and transport planes, lined up Tow on row. with no attempt at dispersal. : I American supply dumps, motor pools and ammunition depots show little or no camouflage and inadequate anti-aircraft defenses. U.N. transport convoys often travel bumper to bumper on highways. Headquarters units cluster their tents in open fields with no attempts at camouflage. (p Blackouts, except at the front, are not enforced. Hi TJ.N. troops encamped in rest areas often with no attempt at dispersal or camouflage. , . its . Chinese Precaotlons "The correspondent reported the AK lied side a beehive: Of obvious activity while across the front lines there was no sign of the foe. j Chinese and North Korean Reds camouflage everything, including trucks and troops, puns are placed in hidden defiles, or covered with straw and tree limbs to conceal them from strafing. Surveys show American GIs at the actual front do . conceal themselves and their equipment because there It is a life and death; matter. But in the rear) areas, he found a strange apathy toward camouflage and dispersal techniques. He said it was enough to make veterans of World War II shake with apprehen sion. Gift White Elephant ; There's a weighty problem at the White House and State Department in connection with the offer of a sacred "elephant to President Truman. The gift has been proffered by the King of Cambodia, one of three Indo Chinese states- which on January 1 received grants of substantial inde - pendence from France. The President is sunning himself atKey West, ! Fla, so White House aides and Secretary Acheson's ad visers are sweating it out alone. They are searching for a diplomatic ' way of saying "No" without hurting royal feelings.; That may be difficult if not impossible to do. Republicans,: of course, are .of no help. They would jike to see an ele phant in the White House, even a real - one. .--jf . j . , If the diplomats; decide they can't say "No,' an even more weighty problem arises. The White House nas garage facilities but no stables and you can't send a sacred white ele phant to the bone yard. Nothing of course is ever new, as. the historians say. -A study of history shows Indian Prime Minister Nehru once sent an elephant to Washington school children. It j wound up in the capital zoo. u H - - v t : J Sidelights In Pittsfield, Mass.. police stopped -a motorist f or j speeding and discov ered the number on hie license did not agree with: the number "611-969 on his car plate. They finally came up with the solution. The plate was . on upside down; it should have read --636-119.- ' i. k -:- 'O In Pearl Riverj' N. Y, a hunter took a shot at a- crow and blew up a small fireworks plant, rocking com munities in two states. Fire depart ments ' and ; ambulances - responded from six neighboring communities but had nothing to do. Six frame ' buildings were blown to kindling but the blast put the ? fire out, Plant workers had quit for the day a half hour earlier. so no one was injured. (AU Kiflht Restrred, AP oMlartt) " PARIS: An THE Paris conference of Big X Four foreign minister deputies is an 11th hour attempt of Russia and the western powers to settle their differences by diplomacy. These differences, which began even before the end of World War n, have become known as the cold rar.. ' . j Almost a year ago, Korea suddenly became a hot spot in the cold war and history may yet record it as the real, start of World War IH, ; But if that struggle can be isolated and kept to the status of a local inci dent no matter how ' sordid or tragic full scale war may be averted or at least pushed back in tune. East West flare-ups over Trieste and ' the Berlin blockade, diplomats say, were handled in this fashion, li May Open a" Door - . The Paris talks, of course, will not decide anything important. Actually k they; are nothing but a meeting to ; 1 try and agree on an agenda for a later, conference in Washington of the : .foreign ministers. But Paris may afford the oppor tunity of opening another door to ne gotiation on the crucial problem of Europe in the east-west tug of peace. .: As long as diplomats can keep open- ing new doors, they have reason to i hope the differences may eventually., be settled with words not bullets. Western sources say the real issue at Paris is whether Russia actually means to seek a diplomatic settlement j of cold war problems. Andrei A. Gromyko, head of the 20-man Soviet delegation at Paris, proposed that the German treaty question be discussed in line with principles of the Potsdam Agreement. The western position has been that STILL ON THE Crime Probe Deadline The Senate committee investigating organized crime throughout the United States will open what may prove to be climax hearings Monday in New York. The committee, headed by Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) says there are two major crime syndicates in the nation. One, directed by the Fischetti brothers, Rocco and Charles who are heirs of the old Capone mob, operates from ! Chicago through the south, ac cording to investigators. The committee says the other, headed by Frank Costello and Joe Adonis, had headquarters in New York and operates down the east ; coast to Florida. March 31 Deadline The New York hearings may last two weeks but by then the life span of the Senate committee i will have I just about run out It Is scheduled to ' expire March 31, and chairman Ke- 1 f auver has said repeatedly he will not ask for an. extension. Other commit- tee members, however, have urged " that it stay on the job and be given FBI men to speed effective inquiries. In a preliminary report recently, -j-the committee said: "The most shock- ing revelation is the extent of official C. corruption and connivance in facili- ; tating and promoting i organized i crime." It found corruption extending '. to all levels of 'government federal. state and local. . Incidents cited by the committee in : its -report;-.; . . 'X Two state governors received cam- : paign contributions . from f- organized criminals. :' . ' "., ' ;.vv; -. One sheriff had a bookmaking busi ness in his office. . " t The report said gangsters and gam- ' biers, brazenly faked income tax re- ; turns and charged there was serious '. doubt that the Internal Revenue Bu- reau made a real effort to check. '. 11th Hour FAIR SHAKE The' Big Four foreign minister "deputies meet in Paris. Left to right are Ernest Davies, Britain; Philip Jessup, United , States; Andrei Gromyko, Russia,' and Alexandre Parodi, France. -t- -' 'r-.-M 'v : -'; h - i r . '' ' the Potsdam pact is a useless basis for.: that were German allies In World negotiation because the Russians have consistently violated it. Parallel to Korea In line with his suggestion to dis- cuss demilitarization of Germany by the Potsdam yardstick, Gromyko also proposed discussioa ot Four - Power disarmament and withdrawal of 00 cupatiorMorces from Germany. That is one issue the west will ex amine very closely. Withdrawal of occupation forces ; from ., Germany . could create an identical vacuum to the one in Korea 1 when American garrisons pulled out. American sources: insist that if Big Four talks are to! be renewed all causes of European tension must be examined.; . These include a peace treaty for Austria and a study of re- armament' In Soviet satellite states HIGH WIRE In Short Halted: By the Uj stockpiling of tin until such allies as Britain, Hol land, Belgium and Bolivia cut prices now, more than : 150 per cent higher than when the Korean war started. Granted: By the j Carnegie Fund, $22,500 for a study 'of techniques to aid native leaders desiring to revolt against communist comination. -j ; rreposed: Byi the US ahat the United Nations recruit a volunteer uv ternational army; to combat aggression anywhere in the world. Charged! By Pakistan in the U-N. Security Council, that "Indian aggres sion is on the march."' ' i CSACX4-The boseboli season does not open until April 16 but oil - cjetting Into condition. Here Stan Musia! of the jSt Louis Cardinals Att(irribt War IL ; f Russia, in a recent diplomatic note to Britain, claimed its armed forces were no more j than 2,500,000 men while it put the combined western t mn-than nnn nnn wt. - 5nteiHatw nnnrt. swt armed strength at 4,000,000 men with better than 1,000,000 mote in the Red satellite states, not including Com munist China. ;-f -Another Bed Boycott Washington reported last week that . Russia' had broken off talks on terms for a Japanese peace treaty because of its demands for veto power. The State f Department declared in a statement: "The United States will persist in seeking an over-all peace for Japan but it concedes to no one the' right to veto peace." . Quotes British field Marshal Viscount Benam L. , i Meatceaaery: I would . as soon think , of going into battle without my artillery, as without my chaplains." : Ixvestia, Soviet government newspaper: -Since the first day of American occupation, ' Gen. MacArthur busied himself with the transformation of Japan into a base of aggression- by .the United States against 'Asia." - SCIENCE: Hope Afomic Umbrella I ; j - Dr. Vannevar Bush, wartime head of the Office of Scientific Research and Development which coordinated the work of 30,000 scientists in atomic research, believes continued Ameri can development of the A-Bomb should avert World War III- He saw no danger of immediate war because if Russia were to open' hostilities now she would be de stroyed "without question by Ameri can atomic bombs. i ff Dr. Bush, president of the Carnegie . Institution, was the first of a series of speakers sponsored by the Committee on the Present Danger, a nonpartisan group formed to support j a strong de- ' fense for this nation irt cooperation with other free countries.' i : ' 'Nevada Tests -Dr. Bush said the recent atomic tests on Frenchman's Flat near Las Vegas, wev presumably were ox new types of atomic bombs. He pointed out that the free world's problem was to maintain the military stalemate ; now possible; because of U. S. superiority in atomic devel op- He noted that defenses I against strategic bombing had been improved since the war and predicted that eventually Russia could be able to protect her key points with radar, jet interceptors, anti-aircraft - artillery and perhaps guided missiles, f - : Dr. Bush discussed tactical possibili ties of the atomic bomb; and related ; ... -- . - . - . 'A-.. : - . ens !.-:-. i.-,r.'-'. T'HE Census Bureau has re ported that 58,905,000 civilians held jobs in February, much th highest mid-winter job total ever achieved. j . But if the job picture was rosy, the role of organized' labor, in the mo bilization program was not Union spokesmen without exception have walked out of Defense MobilLeer Charles E. Wilson's councils, j I Charge a Treeie-Out: , They charge a freeze-out at the policy1 making level of organized la bor, . the farmer and the small busi nessman. They say BigBusiness dom inates mobilization planning and there 4 m Vf fteA anaa 1 tin w a ita1 fv a mm aav wuv a m r.aaa u fr tut ; aac ff suatv ' of workers and consumers. j j j The United Labor Policy Commlt . tee, representing 13 million CIO, AIT and railway union members, is plan ning a: nationwide drive for reform of current price and inflation con trols. ,Seven hundred state and city labor J representatives will meet la Washington March 20 and 21 to chart . their strategy. i . ( I Philip Murray, CIO president, has called the present approach to- a so lution of inflation "lopsided.1' In j a nationwide broadcast, he said it was a basic defect that ran through ill defense mobilization planning., r ' "It is not just- a labor- problem when consumer prices go up, or an inequitable share of- taxes are, Im posed ion the lower Income groups," ;,he said.i-w.r-'. f$f (r. ! On. the other hand, Murray said, corporation profits are at an "astound ing all-time high": and nothing effefc- . tive is being done to make super-rich 1 . I . t . i . m corporaiions per ineir uur snare as, the national burden. 1 All-Time Record ! J General Motors, the Ration's largest - private manufacturer, .announced net corporate profits of 1834,044,039 on sales of $7,531,086,848 in 1950 biggest in the history of American free en terprise. The GM net i profit was 27 ' per cent higher than in 1949, the record up to that time. , i GM; along with other automotive . manufacturers, raised new car prides last weekend by J'i per. cent, the maximum permitted by the Office of Price Stabilization. Commenting on the relation of prices and profits, GM officials said: 1 - "If profits were not to fluctuate, prices, would have io be increased ,in periods of low volume but would fall in periods of high volume. Such' a policy! would not be desirable nor practical in an industry subject to- impact of both costs and competition. of the Free them to the current problem; of de fense of western Europe. j i i Tactical WeapM In the event of war three to five. years from now. he said, the Russians might be confronted by a line held In depth by outnumbered but well-disciplined and well-armed divisions, j i The; Red Army could break such; a line, hie declared, only by a huge con- centration of men, artillery and tanks. J . Because ot the . atomic bomb, hei said, such concentration would not be- 'feasible. For example, an A-Bomb de livered on a massive group of forces . such as the Germans gathered to. make their break-through in the Bat tle of the Bulge would be devastating. ng. k . j; Tanks as Traps I Dr. Bush foresaw the heavy tank a liability rather : than an asset due time because of the development of recoilless weapons. He said a new type . of recoilless - anti-tank gun. manned by four men, was more than a match for the heaviest tanks yet developed. Tanks and massed artillery, have long been a strong point around. Which I Soviet military thinking re volved. ! j j The scientific leader backed the idea: of sending American troops to Europe allies. He suggested the training pt 18-year-olds for two years and keep ing them available for service in the reserve branches. ; L j . Dr. Bush predicted that young mea trained now would not see any fight ing tor several years at least ; over the South players are t A hits a long one to the fence. .