1 Ti ! ' J" getsjnvwisaiaMSMB . " I. 1 i : , I i ... .. -.f . j a- f m I it 1 1 V It ; ' - V ' 1 .(- I a-... r . . ' i i. . I - i J : i , j -I Tito Gets rl MS. Wlpi Worth Koreans I Urge S-Power Peace Pact NORTH Korean Communists are reported launching another peace offensive The drive is for signatures of all Koreans on petitions urging a five-power peace conference. The five countries would be Britain, Communist China, France, Russia and the United States. The new peace offensive followed within a week the dismissal by President Truman of Gen. MacArthur as Pacific commander of k Will.iD T ln)0 American and United Nations forces. Familiar Pattern . The peace formula proposed by the Korean Red government to the U.N. is identical to recommendations of the Red-dominated eWorld Peace Council which met" in the Soviet zone of Ber lin last November. The peace offer by North Korean" foreign minister Pak Hen En to the UN. was - accompanied by another cable demanding that all international forces be withdrawn from Korea. It also called on the U.N. to punish what it called "monstrous American atroci ties." It was the 18th such communica tion from the Korean Red govern ment since last June 28 three days after the invasion occurred. Quarantine Belt Meanwhile an American Congress man proposed dividing North and South Korea by a belt of radioactive poisons along the 38th Parallel as a - way out of the military stalemate. Neither side had been able to ac complish its announced objectives. The U.N. has been unable to drive the invaders completely out of the penin sula and bring about unification. The Communists have been unable to drive the U J. defenders into the tea. The suggestion for a "dehumaniz ing" - area across the peninsula was made by Rep. Albert Gore (D-Tenn). As a member of the House Appropria tions subcommittee handling fdnds for Jhe Atomic Energy Commission, he is in a position to know about atomic- developments. Plea for Use "We have it Please consider using it," Gore said in a letter to the Presi dent."" - The AEC declined to comment on Gore's; proposal. So did the White House and the Pentagon. Gore suggested that spreading ra dioactive materials over a Korean area and repeating the contamina tion periodically would make it unfit lor all life and a barrier to all mili tary ground operations. Scientists say such a feat is theo retically possible but doubt it would be effective militarily. Radioactive sand, dust or liquid probably could be sprayed from planes in a belt com pletely across the peninsula Lingering Effects But, they point out, radioactive poi sons do not immobilize victims im mediately. Illness and death would not be likely for several weeks after exposure. Communist soldiers, with out any protection, would be able to advance effectively for hours at least, and probably for days, through the contaminated area. Military strategists express the view that perhaps the most important use of such materials would be their psychological effect as- a mystery weapon. Initial use of poison gas and of tanks had such an effect during World War I. Sidelights Dresses' can be fabricated from corn, according to the National Farm Chemurgic Council. O Embarrassed Ohio lawmakers learned that a visiting "Maine state senator" who addressed the Legisla ture actually was an escaped patient from a mental hospital. A new; census shows that after 80 years Paraguay has balanced its sexes. In the 1860's, so many Paraguayan soldiers were killed in a war with Uruguay, Argentina and Brazil that women outnumbered men 7 to 1. Suspicious accountants ot the Air Force conducted an investigation into why baby diapers were purchased for B-47 Stratojet bombers.. They found the soft, lint-free cloths were being used to clean bombsjght lenses. In Leven, Scotland, municipal au thorities failed to rid the town-' of a pigeon nuisance by feeding the birds grain and bread crumbs soaked in Scotch whisky. Said the borough su pervisor: "The speed with which the pigeons ate the doctored grain was almost indecent. Either the whisky was watered down or those birds are Id drinking hands." - v -... t JETS OVER GERMANY Four U.S. Air Fore F-84E Thunderjats fly in precision formation during maneuvers ever Bavaria. Dates Monday, April 23 i . Annual Associated Press funch-f eon in New York. J Tuesday, April 24 J f American Newspaper Publish ers Association convenes iri New York City. : - f Anniversary (151st), Library of Congress. t Thursday, April 26 t Confederate Memorial Day (Ala, Fla., Ga. and Miss.).; Saturday, April 28 ; Australian parliamentary elec tions. Sunday, April 29 i Daylight Saving Time starts In many communities. J : National Cotton Week starts. National 4-H Club Sunday. People Otherf ive-Star Generals Gen. Omar N. Bradley may be asked to stay on for another two years as chairman of the Joint Chiefs ;of Staff. Bradley's term expires August 16 and the five-star general, 58, had wanted to take off his uniform after 35 years- service but the President is said to want him to re main. As JCS chairman, Bradley has had to handle problems equal to any he en countered either as Gen. Eisenhower's ground deputy in World War II or as Army chief of staff. These include the GEN. BRADLEY purely military problems arising from the Korean war and the buildup of American forces in western Europe. In addition, there has been the cli mactic political controversy topped off by , the dismissal of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. As . chief counselor on military affairs to the President, Brad ley, presumably sat in on the discus sions as to whether MacArthur was to be fired or reprimanded, f Bradley, called the "GI General" and the "schoolmaster tactician," is the first man to hold the JCS chair manship. Eisenhower served j for six months as "coordinator for the Joint Chiefs but this was only a temporary arrangement carried out by Executive order. -j Under the customary military rota tion system, the chairmanship is scheduled to go next to the Navy, then to the Air Force. Word is recurrent about Washing ton that another five-star general. De fense Secretary George; C. Marshall, . intends to step down later in the year. On three occasions, Mr. Truman has called on Marshall for special service: first as a special emissary to China, second as Secretary of State, and then to take the Defense Department port folio. Marshall underwent a serious kidney operation a little over a year ago. Russia Another Five-Year Plan Soviet Russia announced it has completed its fourth fiveyear plan by exceeding targets in vitally important iron and steel industries. Moscow reported the plan had been completed in four years and three months rather than the scheduled five years. ' f While it did not claim success in every field of production, the an nouncement said total iron and steel tonnage had gone up 45 per cent in stead of the estimated : 35 per cent over the 1946 rate. Pig iron production was reported up 29 per cent, smelting of steel 49 per cent and rolled metals up 59 per cent. S-21H) ; i . a v - - i ; i - - - ' . - 1 1 . i " t . - ' y THE t f I . I i HISTORY reveals a striking jparallel in the careers of General of the Army Douglas MacArthur and his father, Gen. Arthur Mac Arthur. Both were outstanding soldiers and both, while stationed in the Far East, had bitter dis putes with civilian authority. In 1900 Douglas was a plebe at West Point when Maj. Gen. Arthur MacArthur was made military gov ernor of the Philippines, acquired two years earlier in the war with Spain. There was trouble with Philip ' pine guerrillas opposed to American occupation. President McKinley appointed William Howard Taft, father of Ohio's present senator, to head a commission charged with establishing a civilian government for the islands. Taft Was Rebuffed When the commission arrived, Taft waited for Mac Arthur to pay his respects but the general sent a colonel instead. Finally Taft himself went to visit Mac Arthur who gave him a cool welcome and assigned for commission use only one small room in the governor's palace. In this antagonistic atmosphere, the two men and their staffs worked a whole year. On July 4, 1901, Taft became civilian governor of the Philippines. Maj. Gen. MacArthur was relieved of his command and returned to military duty in the Cmited States. Within the next five years, Arthur MacArthur held a series of top Army assignments and reached his high est rank, lieutenant general. In 1907, he finished a tour of duty as commander of the Army's Division of the Pacific, considered by many as a stepping stone to Chief of Staff, the highest Army position. MacArthur Was Not Selected But the Secretary of War in 1907 was William How ard Taft. Secretary of War Taft preferred Gen. J. F. Bell and Lt. Gen. Arthur MacArthur remained in semi retirement until his actual retirement at 64 in 1909. That was the same year Taft became President. Forty-two years later, Arthur MacArthur's son winged home to one of the greatest welcomes ever accorded any soldier. There were 17-gun salutes and tumultuous ovations for him in Honolulu, San Fran cisco, Washington and New York. Like his father, Douglas MacArthur fairly bristles with ability. These are some of the highlights of his brilliant military record: He was graduated from West Point with a four-year scholastic average of 98.14, highest in history. He was at 38, the youngest division commander in France in WUOf ' UN. TOO In Short... Lost: By the Swiss Communist Workers Party, 10 of the 12 seats it held in the 180-member Zurich Par liament in last Sunday's elections. Stolen: $350,000 in jewelry and furs from the swank New York City home of Hope Hampton Brulator, blonde former film actress, h i Reported: Mao Tze-tung, Commu nist China's premier, ? convalescing from serious illness; with the People's . Government of .China being run by Liu Shao-chi, a pro-Soviet extremist. - Appealed: By the. U. S. Air Defense . Command, for 400,000 volunteers as civilian aircraft spotters along both 'coasts and the entire northern border." Toad: By a Royal Commission, no "evidence that gambling is a cause of crime in Britain. : : : t : f i i i . . i . i s i - . - ;' - :m. - . I i l I I ' ' I :ene: shifts 153 .reft ami ,n, . - - rK4t Ns: i . 4.'"' fr-- , - 1 .-, . "."Ilyi 'J'i'ffcaiMffltf-Vrt iiafsfirttifiiimat SURPRISE - General Eisenhower reacted this way in Coblenz, Germany, when told of MacAr thur's ouster by the President. , MANY HATS Quotes Lady Astor, Virginia-born for- , mer member of the British House of Commons: "General Douglas .MacArthur never should have been put in Tokyo it made him feel like -a god." - - ; , ; President Truman: "It doesn't" make any difference what hap--' pens to me (politically) if we win : the: peaceJ?!;. ''.;:-V:."3 r James A. Farley, former Dem ocratic national chairman; "It is ' too early to talk about candidates yet but it appears to me that some of these, days. Gen. Eisen hower will have to indicate with which party he is affiliated." - (AO, Rights Reserved. AP NtwsMturcsi ywogB' CC "' I,. ,n-n THE HEAT IS ON PROBE: Interstate Crime Report Being Readied Senate crime investigators and a .special commission of the American Bar Association : are conferring, in Washington on ; legislative . curbs ; for interstate crimel ; j . i . , . The committee, ; headed by , Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn) is divided over whether it should carry on. Its two Republican i senators, Charles W. Tobey of New Hampshire and Alexander Wiley , of Wisconsin, want it to continue until January 15. Sen. Wiley has drafted a resolution providing for such an extension. He had hoped to 'get at least one of the i Democrats on the committee to join in its sponsorship. ; Sen. Kefauver favors a continuing 5q "'V ' A mmmm 1 fclslSSSSSSMaife.:'-tfwfeWiVi World War I. He was Army chief of staff at 50, the youngest in history.; Many believe his crowning achievement was beating Japan in what has been called the "forgotten half of World War IL in which at first he worked with piti ; fully scant forces. As Supreme Allied Commander, he administered the occupation of Japan, refusing to jermit any four power squabbling which has characterized the military occupation of Germany. The Japanese, who first feared him as a conqueror now revere him second only to the Emperor. . He was the first Supreme Commander of United Na tions forces in Korea. He engineered a brilliant cam paign which routed: the numerically superior North Korean invaders; until intervention by Chinese Com munist armies made it a whole new war. Relieved of Command A fortnight ago, Gen. MacArthur at 71 was at what many considered the peak of his career. Now he is a genera without a command. He was dismissed by President Truman for insubordination. The record leaves no doubt that the five star general disputed publicly the Administration's. foreign policy. The basic issue is whether in the global fight against communism, the major effort shall be made in Europe or Asia. Another is whether to fight a limited war in Korea or risk all-out war by bombing Manchuria and opening a second front in China with the Chinese Na tionalists bottled up in Formosa. On Thursday, Gen. MacArthur stood before a joint session of Congressi There and in later committee hearings he was scheduled to outline his conviction that aggression must be j stopped in Asia, primary goal of the Russians in theif drive for world domination. Pro and Con Even before MacArthur got to Washington, the Ad ministration viewpoint was voiced by Gen. Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and first of the five-star generals to oppose his views. Said Gen. Bradley to a yeteran of Foreign Wars conven tion in Chicago: "The Korean war, under present conditions, may be headed for a stalemate, but it can be brought to- ah honorable conclusion. "Any effort to settle the world crisis by an ultimatum perhaps accompanied by a threat to bomb Russia is militarily impracticable and might backlash. "We are intent on preventing World War III. We are not making moves, that might lead to enlargement of the present conflict" Kthu. Batolu Cwir f apraa study by i an executive " commission, possibly under supervision of a special Senate-House committee. .. -i Tobey and Wiley contend the probe should be extended to other cities. Ke fauver says the pattern of underworld operations has been established and the big job now is to frame laws curb ing the power of bigtime gamblers. 11 Recommendations for new laws are being drafted, by the committee in consultation with a Bar commission: headed by former Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson. j ) iThe legislative measures must be whipped into shape before the. com-! mittee submits its report. The original deadline for the report was March 31 but the Senate extended it an addi tional month. JUGOSLAVIA; has progressed jL from the status of a rebellious Red satellite state to a -western: cohort- at least temporarily! I . ! Marshal Tito has been grantld use of $29,000,000 in U. S. funds to get vitally needed raw materials for his armed forces.. ; I . .The President notified Congress the money will come by Executive Order from the Mutual Defense Assistance Act of 1949.; . . . "4 . . Veer to West - j j ' In recent months there has! been an important policy change id Bel grade. Parliament officially deHarid' that in any general European war Yugoslavia would participate on t6e side of the west.: j After his break with Moscow, Tito tried at first to remain a neuti-al n the growing global controversy be tween east and west. He declared his army would be used only f or ?a de fense. of Yugoslav soil. . But as the Cominform campaign pt hate progressed, the marshal recog-. nized that for him at least, there was no neutrality? He was a marked mn and Yugoslavia was a prime target toward which all the satellite states were being egged.- . . I I ! Feelers for Aid Several months ago Tito Infor mally asked the U.S., France an4 Brit ain for modern military weapons: chiefly tanks, planes and guns. Much of the equipment of the Yugoslav army had come from Czech, German and Russian, munitions factories and : these sources of supply were cut cf from him . , ; j Tito is more concerned with teach ing a working agreement with the western ' powers than - joining the North Atlantic defensive' paet or signing any formal treaties, j I There Is recognition in Washington that while Yugoslavia is still a Com munist state it most certainly is not a Soviet satellite. The. Americah po sition is substantially this: by prop ping up Tito it is increasing. thel odds against any lightning Soviet $weep over western turope.- Draft i. College Deferments College men, who score 70 or better in aptitude tests or who are in the upper ranks scholastically, may be de ferred in order to resume their educa tion in the fall. - j - i Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey says calling up college men this spring will be delayed until after their test scores and scholastic i aver ages have been computed. . I' Hershey also believes the great mass of entering freshmen will attend col lege classes next fall without inter ference from the draft program.! f Thousands of queries have ben re ceived from students worried by the fact that their school terms and their statutory deferment would end be fore they could take the aptitude test. Many school terms end before the test dates May 26, June 16 and June 30 and scholastic standings often are not determined by faculties for weeks after school is out. I Hershey said the Kilday amendment to the draft bill passed last week by the House did not impair plans for giving the tests or 'using the scores. The amendment says, in effect,? draft boards are not bound by the aptitude tests in granting deferments, j f The final draft law is before a con ference committee of the House and Senate. The Senate bill had no pro vision similar to the amendment' of-, fered by Rep. Paul J. Kilday (DTex). Radio Still Growing I 1 For all of television's spectacular growth, radio has continued to expand to the consternation of those who pre dicted it would be killed by TV. r Radio advertisers have pressed for some time for a slash in radio rates, particularly for the big budget eve ning hours, on the grounds that TV has cut sharply into radio listening! Columbia Broadcasting System has announced a rate slash for its radio network shows beginning July 1. The reduction ranged from 10 to IS per cent. V . '; e Some Rates Go Up f A spot check among broadcasters at the Chicago convention of the Na tional Association of Radio and Tele vision Broadcasters indicated that few if any intend to follow the CBS lead. A number reported recent radio rate increases. , '. j Radio men point out that during 1950, TVs biggest year to date, the public bought 14,000,000 radio sets nearly twice as many as TV. I Ninety-five per cent of American homes have radios and there are about 100 million sets in use, including 18 million in automobiles. Radio station WLEC at Sandusky, Ohio; in range of Cleveland and To ledo TV -transmitters, reported more business than ever before. Last Oc tober this station increased its adver tising rates 25 per cent. j i; , One survey shows that 67 per cent of families with TV still listen to ra dio for an average of two hours and 10 minutes a day compared with 87 per cent for the non-TV home. . ; Some advertising agency executives predict privately, however, that some adjustment 'in night radio rates is inevitable. .- V - , Mil