f i TJTT T" .. 7 BY -J haky Kremlin Hold 5n Sate i - ! ers THE VORLD'-THIS wBE . ... , , II iies Off Ebb of Communist Power May Be Near i By WILLIAM L. RTAN Associated Press Foreign News Analyst nHE economic facts of life have caught up with Com A munist rulers and a combination of fear and frustra tion may soon have heads rolling throughout the empire The prospective meeting of the Big Three foreign min isters in Washington cannot come too soon. In the light of what has happened in East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland and inside the Soviet Union itself, the West urgently needs to re-examine its approach to the major issues 01 the day. f The situation contains innumerable possibilities, all the way from a headlong retreat of the Communists to the outbreak of a general war. All these pos sibilities must be examined care fully before the West, in concert, can go ahead with its planning for the future. Civil War Possibilities The possibility that events like the revolts in East Berlin and East Germany can lead to a German civil war or to frat riciaal war fare in. other satellite coun trieshas not been lost up on leaders on either side of the iron cur- , tain. Such a development could be the , spark on the powder keg that could set off the explo William t. Ryari sion of World War III. The Soviet press has already indicated the Kremlin is quite aware of this possibility. It probably is just as chilling and distasteful an idea for Moscow as it is for any western capital. The idea could well be the reason for the long list of con cessions offered to the East Ger man people to curb their wrath. The concessions could easily ex tend to lopping off the heads of the most hated Communist lead ers of East Germany Commu nist Boss Walter Ulbricht, for example and to the sudden demise of Red bosses in other satellite countries, Kremlin Shows Frustration The angry and abusive out pourings of the Kremlin, char acterized by an extraordinary three-column editorial of vitu peration on the front page of Pravda last week, reflect Krem lin frustration. The Moscow leaders are impaled on the horns of a dilemma. If they give in to the wrath of the Germans, they show weakness in the regime of Premier Georgi Malenkov. But give in they must, taking a long chance that the East Germans can be kept in control there after. Their campaign to neu tralize Germany through the ' lure of hopes for reunification is too important to be discarded in favor of brutal suppression in the East Zone. But signs of weakness are dangerous for the Malenkov regime. Already there are reports-of the German defection spreading to Poland, Hungary and other areas of the satellite empire. Under Soviet orders, Communist leadership is being tightened all .along the line. Communist bosses are being brought to bdbk for economic failures which produced the mass popular discontent, even though the real blame lies with Moscow and its enforcement of the program of heavy industry throughout the empire. If what happened in East Ger many was symptomatic of con ditions elsewhere in the Soviet captive empire and this be comes more likely with each day's dispatches the Soviet Union would have reason to be fearful. . Threats Loom 1 Such situations carry the threat of vfar, but the Kremlin would be aware that more than a half million troops in its satel lite empire would be unreliable. Moreover, the situations carry a threat to the Moscow regime it self. It requires no penetrating an alysis to disclose a very real fear ' of war among the Soviet people, fed all these years by Soviet propaganda - and nourished by the memories of the last war's horrors. It is just as evident that the Moscow regime, none too secure at home,"is not too trustful of its own army leaders. There has been an insistent campaign in the Soviet press to convince the people that "heroes, generals and statesmen should not be glorified, that it is only the peo ple themselves who make his tory. Throughout the campaign is an indication of nervousness with regard to the Soviet army's potentialities. An army revolt against Com munist power in the USSR need not necessarily start within So viet borders. The well trained. disciplined troops outside the Soviet borders also could con stitute a threat, should the right " hero come along to lead a military uprising. It is not at all beyond the bounds of possibility that the troops in East Germany could be so led in time of crisis. Another Possibility Such thoughts might well prove a deterrent to Moscow. But the West could hardly bank upon such developments. Should the prospect of civil war loom clearly in Germany, the West would be obliged to assume that Soviet troops would remain loyaL The possibility of World War III would become very real. The foreign ministers confer ence will be vitally important. If ever a solid front against the Kremlin was needed, it is now, when the Communist world gives every evidence of being caught off balance. a unitea western iront now would stand a good chance of success in keeping the Commu nists on the backward run. If economic conditions in East Ger many, Eastern Europe and even Communist China are going to be alleviated, there must be a decided effect upon the Soviet industrialization program and the Soviet timetable. There will even, in all likelihood, be a strong economic effect within the borders of the USSR itself, to say nothing of the political impact in the subjugated Soviet republics. Unquestionably, the western foreign ministers will examine all these possibilities most care fully, perhaps with rising hopes that the ebb of Communist pow er is at hand, brought about by Communism's own self-devouring mechanism and without the horrors of a new war. News Brief s Reported: by the Aircraft In dustries Association, that sched uled airlines have carried more than 166 million passengers since passage of ithe Air Com merce Act in 1926. Changed: by the White House, the title of James B. Conant from U. S. High Commissioner in Germany to ambassador. The chiefs of the West German dip lomatic missions in Washington, London and Paris also were raised to the rank of ambas sador. Announced: by the Defense Department, that more than half the men who entered military service since the Korean war be gan are still on active duty three years later. Disclosed: by the Japanese ministry of transport, that Japan hopes to begin its first commer- ciai air rugnis across me facinc in November. i EX-PRESIDENT TALKS WITH Private citizen Harry Truman rSsv. I - -r '- ;-J':s tms weeic ne snooK nanas witn caDDies, posea lor camera fans and had a good time for himself. , i It probably couldn't happen anywhere else but in America. More than one New York hack driver might have said to his wife: "Bumped into Harry Truman on 43rd Street today. Nice guy." But in one sense it was just like old times. Mr. Truman was talking politics and Republicans were tali in e back. In his first formal speech since vte ciuzen Amman cnaiiensea Duaget slashes by the Eisenhower IS IT LOADED? ARTS Music Note The boss of America's music makers, James C. Petrillo, sel dom goes in for diplomacy. But he plans to take a fling at it dur ing his current European visit, Petrillo wants to talk to Den mark's King Frederik IX about some long-hair phonograph re cordings the king makes from time to time. The recordings have Mr. Petrillo ruffled because they sometimes find their way into U.S. radio stations. So, Petrillo will drop in on the king and ask him to promise not to permit the use of his record ings for commercial purposes. It will be just a heart-to-heart talk, says the American Federa tion of Musicians chief. Science Armed with 30,000 hypodermic needles and 15,000 syringes, doc tors this week threw a million dollar punch at the serious polio outbreak in Montgomery, Ala. It was the first mass attack on polio with the scarce anti-polio serum gamma globulin. The serum provides immunity for only four weeks, but doctors hoped it would get the highly susceptible younger children through the worst of the sum mer polio season. The Office of Defense Mobili zation flew in 67 gallons of gam Dates Monday, July C i Adlai Stevenson arrives Vienna for special tour. Tuesday, July 7 j Dr. Milton Eisenhower ex tends South American fact finding tour to La Paz, Bo livia. J Thursday, July 9 Stevenson flies to Berlin. Saturday, July 12 j Parliamentary elections, Lebanon. HARRY NEW YORK CABBIES took in the sights in New York leaving the White House, pri- CARTOONISTS VIEW Vm. etw AND SCIENCES REPORT. ma globulin. The National Foun dation for Infantile Paralysis provided the hypodermics, syringes and other equipment and footed much of the estimat ed $1,000,000 inoculation tab. Emergency centers for admin istration of the injections were set up in 12 white and Negro schools in Montgomery. Long before the hour the centers were scheduled to open, lines began forming. Health authorities and Nation al Foundation officials empha sized the gamma globulin tends only to ward off polic paralysis, but does not prevent the disease. Authorities hoped to cut the incidence of polio in Montgom ery by 80 per cent with the in jections. The National Foundation an nounced, meanwhile, that a mass test of a new polio vaccine on as! many as a half million U.S. chil dren may be undertaken this year. The vaccine developed by Dr. Jonas Salk of the University of Pittsburgh will be used if the experiment is carried out. Basil O'Connor, director of the Foun dation, said the vaccine had shown enough promise to war rant such a large-scale test. Under the tentative program, a half million children would be Church Disavows Reds Delegates to the World Meth odist Convocation on Evangel ism in Philadelphia were con cerned over, allegations the churches have been infiltrated by Communists. (See "Educa tion,") Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam challenged critics of the church to "name one clergyman who holds a position of large re sponsibility in any Protestant Church who is a member of the Communist party." Bishop Oxnam previously has taken issue with Rep. Harold Velde (R-Ill.), chairman of the House Committee on UnAmeri can Activities, Velde stated last March it was "entirely possible" his committee might look in- (AllRighttR3Tvtd,APNewtftatuTtt) TRUMAN STEPS TRUMAN OBLIGES AN administration and blamed what ,p . , ( . r-' y A-'t . Vs. :. W 1 V) -ml the GOP for cuts in the Mutual Security program. . The ex-President delivered a warning against lower taxes at the expense of security. I Republicans reacted immediatelySaid one high GOP official: "Mr. Truman is back at the old stand soft on economy, soft on money and soft on communism." Other Republicans asserted the Eisenhower administration would provide a "better defense" than the Truman administra tion.; j ' TWO THORNY ISSUES 1 f iHPL vj IT'S NOT THE given the vaccine and a similar number would get something else. Should the test be under taken late this year, results could not be known until the fall of 1954, O'Connor said. This year is shaping up as an other heavy polio year perhaps the heaviest, but 1953 may pro vide the final answers in the fight against the disease. Education A study of 522 school systems in the U. S. shows teachers tend to veer away from controversial issues in the classroom because of apprehension over Congres sional investigating committees. Results of the study were re ported this week at the annual convention of the National Ed ucation A-ociation in Miami Beach The convention's key note'an affiliated membership of 950,- speaker, Dr. Walter F. Tunks.!000. rector of St. Pauls Episcopal Church, Akron, O., said: It may be that communism has filtered into some of our schools and churches. WhateverJ screening is necessary should beij done locally by those to whom the schools and churches are re sponsible, rather than by Con gressional committees too far removed from the facts and too to Communist infiltration in churches. In a recent speech in the House, California's Republican Rep. Jackson declared Bishop Oxnam "works for the Lord on Sunday and for the Communist front the rest of the week." Oxnam, without naming ei ther Velde or Jackson, told the Methodist convention the charge of Communist infiltration in the church "is the refuge of scoun drels." The convocation marked the 250th anniversary of the birth of John Wesley, founder bf the Methodist church. It also sig naled the opening of a six-month drive by 40,000 Methodist churches to enroll 250,000 more' members 1,000 for each year since Wesley's birth. I OUT ON THE 1 AUTOGRAPH SEEKER he called a "reckless" .wing of j I Alxmn4mr, NiilWWkM fvaaia ( WEATHER often actuated by partisan poli tics." He labelled the "recklessness of those who defend freedom by ways and means that are in themselves a denial of freedom" the real threat to the American way of life. Other educators emphasized that children "cannot be reared in a vacuum and be expected to become competent in citizen ship." Dr. Martin Essex, superinten dent of schools at Lakewood, O., urged school boards to develop orderly procedures to deal with "false super-patriots and fear groups that militantly prevent free inquiry. The convention also took up the teacher shortage, building needs, finances, and enrollment increases. The association is I made up of 450,000 teachers and Quotes Lt. Gen. John W. O'Daniel, commander-in-chief of U.S. ground forces in the Pa cific: "The war in Indochina is in the process of being won, thanks to the develop ment of a Viet Nam army and excellent cooperation with the French." Oscar Castelo, acting de fense secretary of the Phil ippines: "If the Communists decide on large-scale war, they could make a rapid southward sweep of Asian countries. We may find our selves in a situation similar to the darkest days of 1942." Sen. Alexander Wiley, chairman of the Senate For eign Relations Committee: "The Soviet Union which appeared to be so strong, which seemed magnani mously to be tossing noble concessions to the West, is now shown to be a des perate, fear-ridden giant. The powder keg of sub jugated, peoples could blow sky-high over night." ' TOWN 1 4 TAKING THE MORNING CONSTITUTIONAL IN MANHATTAN But Harry Truman had pit on a controversial issue even among Republicans. There was little doubts the Democrats planned to glean ammunition from the defense budget fracas on Capitol Hill for iise in next year's crucial Congressional elections. The criticism already had been offered! that the GOP adminis tration was planning to meet possible Soviet attacks on the U. S. with a well-balanced budget. ' Republicans have sliced the about 41 billion dollars to 36 billion. U. ib . Likely to jCeep Atom Its By J, M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press mHE dautioui reaction of A thatithe government is ml I . f I Disaster Worried livestock men and farmers 'sifted tjie drought-dry soil of West Texts through their fingers. I The fjurrows where plants should haye been growing were fillifd with sand. Grazing land for dairy cattle was dry and cracked. There had been no rain for morejthan ajmonth. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benjson made a tour of the stricken Sarea, djrew up a four point prbgram !of government help an promjised immediate aid. j The gfcvernment program is designed to head off financial ruin fori ranchers and farmers by: . I J 1. Maying , available cotton seed and! other food byproducts for herd$ and flocks to eat "at prices producers can afford to pay." j i 2, Lowering jrail rates to drought areas.: "We've got to get the livestock and the feed to gether," SecretaW Benson stated 3. Planning for a stepped-up buvine troram of meat and lower grade livestock; This would be a molve to get lower grade liestockj into consump tion, not storage,. j 4. Working oiit some method for emerjgency fcredlt, using ex isting agencies ?s far a possible. Following urM the Benson pro gram, al'drought disaster relief act" wasl introduced in the Sen ate which would authorize gov ernment! loans I to farmers and stockmes at foir pec cent inter est and would provide .for fed eral purchase qf feed and other supplies i for resale to iarmers President Eisenhower allocated eight million dollars in emer gency ritlief ijo 152 drought- stricken J-countifes in Texas end 40 in Oklahoma shortly after the disaster neasure was introduced in the senate. . j Business I ! The bfiisinessi outlook for the second Half o 1953 is bright. Businessmen stjill say there are no signs of a recession just' around the corner, Government 4 economists say. DUSinessiwui ptCK. up in ine ; after suynmer . mass vacations -1 t . 1 . L 4-11 and plant repairs are completed. A 13 pei cent increase over last year's expansion of plants and equipmeht is planned. Defence spending will con tinue high. Jobs will be at a peak thi summer but may be a little esi plentiful by the end of the year! The cbst of living may be a little easier to bear. Auto production may face a slowdown by fall. It hit a record high in fhe first half. Home jbuilding may also slow down a jittle. j - f h Trumans defease budget from stranglehold on atomic energy isr inausinai purposes sug gests thkt the government is going to be the principal developer for aj long time. - j j Congressional hearings this week; brought out the idea that since onty a few private interests afe capable of financing reactors and the other work involved, lettirig any one in dn the jground floor now. would creite the) grav risk of Establishing a great new monopoly bf the future Ri ants New Analyst private enterprise to the news about ready to telinquish its Jj..i 5 . . whirh wnnM fi arttialttv nm based oh an original expenditure by the whole people. I . It was also a fact that pone of the interests deemed capable of taking the plungf had indicated any firm intention of putting up $100-125,000,000 for the purpose. Study Groups Formed In order to get jthe private de velopment idea tinder scrutiny, the Atomic Energy Cotnjmission several months ago formed five study groups from selected in dustries. j In general, the reaction as re ported to executive sessions of the Joint Con gressional Atomic "Ener gy Committee seemed to re- volve c o n t around inued government coope ration. Some wanted the govern- ment jto -help finance proj ects. Some tvonttH guaranteed market for Jplutohi um which would be produced as a part of power projects. Some wanted the benefits of continued government research in the pow er as well as. in jthe explosive field.' . -. I' The AEC apparently started from the premise that there was a good precedent in the radar and other electronic work jlone by the government during the war as a militafy measure and then thrown open to coijnmercial exploitation afterward. Atomic Investment But the people ot the United States I have already . jmade a twelve billion dollarinyestment for atomic development, and there was a growing feeling that the government should remain in a position to get back; as much of it.as possible i it ever begins to show ommerspial prbfits. .Nobody knew when this might be (though 10 S years! seemed about the average guess) nor whether there would actually be any great profit involved. But there was a hunch thajt it just might, one day, be the means of relieving BOme if the nation's great tax burdenj i Secretary of the Intejrior'Mc- T." i.l j A 1 - l rvy iw ,mc vongressio?iai com mittee that benefits of jthe gov- ernment s research should be spread jover as wide a field 'at possible, meaning both large i'nd small business. But small busi ness had no way' of getting in, Under Secretary! of .Commerce Walter; Williams sand Rep. Dur ham (D-NC) wenjt on frjom there to how the government .could retain a profitable financial in terest in the processes. And that note caught jthe fear o a good many who were! following the hearings. . Ownership Theory The idea as broached that the government should continue as the developer until the sys tem was past the stage where; such tremertdoas investment were necessary n whtt might prove to be only experiments, and until lopreredj costs lot enter irg the field, would jinvite a broad instead of ia very limited section of industry. ' There was little idea that in-; . dustrial uses .of atomic energy1 should, remain a government monopoly, with government op eration of power plants and the like after that' becomes Economi cally feasible.! j 1 1 . I But there was ft growing idee, that the government should re- ' tain at least jthe rights that a private! inventor would retain' under similar circumstances. Defe nse The United States still is dan-. gerously! vulnerable to I atomic attack,! defense mobilization of ficials say. . " j r j ' , '(! Chief danger Is the intense concentration of Population and industry in a few metropolitan areas. The top 1$ metropolitan areas contain 30 per cent of the total population and 40: per cent of all f manuf act tiring j employ ment The situation, says one de fense official, is "in open invited tion to attack." j ! The Quickest rejnedy he says, is for city defense planners to organize so efficiently they will be a hi a to develrm a mavimum iimmumrv from enemv attack. HMMikieUMIi i. M. Roberts, Jr. )! i i I i