Since Pearl IH arbor (AP Newsfeatures) If the World ever sees another Pearl Harbor, the results may dwarf those of the "day that will live in infamy" eight years ago today. World War II stimulated development of methods and materials for war. That development is still going on. Here are two big examples: r-., , Bodies of Lost Sailors Stay Entombed in Sunken Ships By WILLARD D. EBERHART Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7 U.R) Eight years ago on the Sunday the late President Roosevelt bitterly called the "day of infamy," Pearl Harbor was a scene of burning ships and dying men. It was December 7, 1941, the day that caused a uddenly uni fied .nation to mount the greatest war effort the world had ever seen. On the eighth anniversary oi the devastating Japanese assault, Pearl Harbor lies under the warm Hawaiian sun, with the bodies of 1,150 men still inside the twisted hulks of two sunken ships. They are silent reminders of the nation's blackest day. Planes The B-17 Flying Fortress left, was tops in the bomber field in 1941. It proved itself in the tough campaigns in Europe, Asia and the Pacific. But there have been many bomber de velopments since. Ju.t now the B-36, right, is top bomber of the U. S. Bombs This type of blockbuster was just commg into gen eral use in 1941. It has since been superceded by A-Bomb This is what now jitters the world. midable commercial empire and willingly or not financed her wars, have all been purged from their former positions. But none of them is in jail. Chikuhei Nakajima. whose aircraft plants manufactured the redoubtable Zero, died peacefully in bed last October. Tamayuki Mitsui, 55-year-old head of the Mitsui clan, has re tired to a farm, but a kinsman is running a country club near Tokyo. Three other Mitsuis who went to Switzerland this summer What's Happened to Jap War Lords of Pearl Harbor Days? By PETER KALISCHER Tokyo, Dec. 7 (UP) Death, imprisonment and obscurity have overtaken most of the men who ruled Japan when the Rising Sun planes bombed Pearl Harbor eight years ago. With a peace treaty in prospect, a survey of the men in power when Nippon went to war with the West reveals that only a few are prospering today. The hangman's noose already has claimed Hideki Tojo and six other high-r a n k i n g Japanese condemned one year ago by an international military tribunal for their crimes against human ity. Marquis Koichi Kido, the mousy former lord keeper of the privy seal and Emperor Hi rohito's closest adviser, whose diary for Dec. 8, 1941, read, "I watched the sun come up red .over Tokyo and saw in it an omen of a glorious new era for Japan," isn't seeing many sun rises these days. He is serving out a life term in Sugamo pri son. So are 15 other generals, ad mirals and government figures who were in power on Pearl Harbor day. They include Ad miral Shigetaro Shimada, the navy minister, whose carriers struck Pearl Harbor, and Hiro shi Oshima and Toshio Shirato ri, ambassadors to Germany and Italy, credited with helping tie Japan to the Axis. Shigenori Togo, Tojo's foreign minister who conveniently "lost" President Roosevelt's llth hour peace cable to Emperor Hirohito until it was too late, is doing 20 years in prison. Tojo's ministers of education and welfare, however, didn't await trial. They committed su icide a few days after Japans surrender. Four others in the Pearl Harbor cabinet are free but out of public life. The ex-commerce minister, Shinsuke Kishi, is the only one to have flourished financially since the surrender. Kishi is pre sident of the Nippon Steel Trad ing Co. In general, fate and the occu pation have been kinder to Ja pan s war-time business giants. The heads of the family mo nopolies that built Nippon's for- ment made It the most complete navy operating base in the world. Nearly a billion dollars have been spent here and the base could be transformed to war status overnight if neces sary. It remains one the world's finest anchorages with more deep water (30 square miles) than famed San Francisco bay. to attend a moral rearmament conference have not yet return ed to Japan. Of 19 major war crimes sus pects who were released for lack of evidence, most are in retire ment writing their memoirs. One of . them, however, Aii- chiro Fujiyama, ex-president of the Japan Chamber of Com merce, is now president of the Japan Sugar Beet Co. Another, Seihin Ikeda, ex-president of the Bank of Japan, is a behindTthe- scenes influence in conservative political circles. The foxiest is Shumei Okawa the Manchurian war planner who was declared insane after he slapped Tojo on the head on the opening day of their trial. Two months after it was an nounced there would be no more Class A war criminal trials, Okawa regained his sanity. He now is translating the Koran, at nome. Dayoflnfamy-8YearsLater Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7 (PI The twisteC superstructure of the proud old battleship Arizona juts above the water. It is a grim reminder of what happened here eight years ago today. Japanese sneak bombs sank the Arizona that fateful Sab bath morn. Many of her gallant crew did not get off. She rests where she fell the Arizona a monument to the first Americans to die in World War H. On this anniversary all about the Arizona was serene and pretty. Life on the naval base flowed evenly. ' Ships glided by gently, entering and leaving this pearl-like spot on the edge of the island called Oahu. Their wakes softly touched the protruding hulk. A small party went aboard. - The Chaplain intoned a prayer. Only a few made the pilgrimage. The Arizona is weak and worn by war and time. Fur Farmer Vantile Piatt V sorts and grades chinchilla pelts after tanning, at a fur breeding farm in Gardens, Calif., where mink and chin chilla are raised for the market Sent to Pearl's muddy bottom perhaps forever, were the Bat tleship Arizona and the targel ship Utah. The waves of the harbors blue water lick their rustea decks as occasional sightseers and next-of-kin make pilgrim ages to these only remaining mementoes of the Japanese at tack. The American graves registra tion service lists 1092 officers and men whose remains are still inside the Arizona. The battle shio sank at her anchorage off the southern edge of Ford Isl and in the middle of the harbor. Of the Arizona's total comple ment of 1,543, only 289 survived the blows of one torpedo and seven heavy bombs, one of which went down her stack. Fifty-eight bodies are still in the Utah on the opposite side of Ford Island. The Japanese sank her with three torpedoes. She lies on her side, mostly sub merged. The Navy found it impractical to raise either ship and it was decided to leave the men where they fell. They comprise more than a third of the 3.033 sold iers, sailors and marines who died in the attack. , The key officer on "battleship row" that day was Capt. (then Commander) William F. Fitz gerald of Washington, D.C. He was operations officer for the commander of battleships and additionally, was duty officer when the blitz began. Now chief of staff to Rear Adm. C. H. McMorris, command ant of the 14th naval district. Fitzgerald said: "Pearl Harbor admittedly was a black day in our history. But I feel it is something the whole country should remember with out minimizing in any way the inadequacy of anyone concern ed. It was 'the result of the complacency of a peace-loving nation." Reading dispatches In hiqj cab in aboard the flagship Maryland that . morning, Fitzgerald sud denly was startled by a sharp jolt. Within seconds there was a second blow. The battleship Oklahoma moored outboard of the Mary land and thus protecting her had taken two aerial torpedoes in her side. Two more hit her and she capsized and sank within 12 minutes. " ran on deck and one glance told me we were at war," Fitz gerald said. "Our machine-gunners were firing when I reached the deck, and the five-inch and anti-aircraft batteries were at work within another minute or two. "The water was covered with flaming oil and the smoke was so intense it was almost impos sible to breathe." The Maryland herself was hit by two bombs forward She was not seriously damaged and man aged to sail for Bremerton for repairs within a fortnight There are no capital ships in Pearl Harbor today; only a handful of submarines, a few de stroyer escorts and some small service craft. Navy men ashore and afloat and civilian workers in the na val shipyard are fewer than at any time since 1939. Some 8,400 civilians are repairing and main taining ships and completing the tag ends of the Pacific war roll- up. Small craft still are being towed from islands around the Pacific to Pearl Harbor for mothballing. But Pearl's war-time develop Interim Group To Tour State Portland, Ore., Dec. 7 (U.R The Oregon legislative highway interim committee will tour the state in 1950 to hear what the people have to say about high ways and highway revenues, it was revealed here today. The committee appointed by the 1949 legislature to investi gate the Oregon highway system with particular attention to high way revenues and their relation to the state, heard George H Flagg, state public utilities com missioner, outline the program for levying and collecting motor truck taxes. Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry discussed the Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Wednesday, Dec. 7, 1949 13 Knowland Blames State Dept. For Far East Catastrophy Honolulu, T. H., Dec 7 (u.Rl Sen William Knowland (R., Calif.), charged Tuesday that the far east division of the U S. Stale Department was largely responsible for the "catastrophic events now taking place in China." Knowland, who arrived after a month's tour of the Orient. declared that many state depart- people of the United States." Knowland said he was not surprised that the state depart ment has "taken a dim view ot my proposal that Gen. Douglas McArlhur be named coordina tor of the joint defense policy in the Far East." ment officials "have initiated condoned or been indifferent to activities which have supported the communists." "We've stood up to the com munists in Europe and cringed before them on the continent of Asia," Knowland asserted, add ing that recognition of the com munist regime in China would be "appeasement." 'It is time the curtain of se crecy was lifted and the Ameri can people told how our friends have been abandoned and the communists supported," he said "I am shocked at what has been done in hte name of the administration of motor vehicle decisions by his office. The committee announced it would go into "the far corners' of the state to quiz people on their reactions to the way the stale's highway system is run Made ESPECIALLY For KIDDIES' CHEST COLDS U ratwre eonfttt tcM( mtctw There' a special Child's Mild Mm terole mad lor kiddies' tender ikia. Musterole not only gives speedy relief but it break up eonReation in upper bronchial tubes, none and throat. Just ruo it od cheat, throat and back. c HUA SHOPS"1" oNGJ A ""fLZzz 199 Shop"""" ,,ttlo'w' .,S9' " Pfec'",0'Cl ...69-5in.YG'r So? SHOP UNTIL 9 P.M. FRIDAY fflw HFf? Gift Med forlees Full-Sized Modal For Boys and Gri A FINER FOR THE BICYCLE MONEY... 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