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The Advocate-Messenger from Danville, Kentucky • Page 4

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Danville, Kentucky
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4
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TIIZ ADVOCATE ESSEWCPL DANVILLE. EXJMUCZT MONDAY. AUGUST 17. 1833 Chaos Behind the Iron Curtain' ThoVcrUTciaj Danville Advocaie Messenger E. German Doomed As Workers Use Marxist Tactics To Befuddle Red Bosses N.

Takes Up Second Step In Plans For Peace Conference Kmtet lb Aiaariaia4 TV AMdu4 fmi la kc1u1t aiitt4 la mm tot JmblicmtUm 1 all Mwfl if IckM miiM 4 Mi alharwwa aadUa4 I thi fpm b4 mi Ui lacal Bw fua- fcaraba. UBtCHIFTIOH kf Caretaw DaavWa ftm Wok I .11 Oh Moat a I.H Thraa Moaiha I Maa It aula Any Plaea la KaaKackf Outalda al DaayUla Thtaa awatha a I.St i Mo Oaa tai Bv MaU OataMla Xmrntmekf MoaUta i i Maatna f.S Tktaa Moat ha ment, free elections, unification year. Only a sudden upsurge of Tha lower ranks of the ad-of the country. At present, they Russian generosity or a new kind ministration no longer get their hope these events can be brought of Hoover mission will keep the usual instructions. Propaganda about by as they people from starving.

material is sometimes four weeks want to avoid bloodshed. old and 6utdated by events be-But, it events don't move fast Facing this situation Is a gov- fro it reaches minor officials, enough; they will take the offen- ernment weakened by repeated Press and radio dont know what sive again, for they know only purges and deeply divided in it- attitude to take from one day too well from the history of So- self. Insider report that Premier to the other. cialism that they possess one Otto Grotewohl and Vice-premier Under tier conditions, it has weapon against which even So- Walter Ulbricht hate each other become impossible to make the viet tanks are powerless: much as Malenkov and Beria did. simplest decisions.

Confiscations A general strike paralyzing the Grotewohl is the carrot-man, cre ordered, then cancelled, then entire state! Ulbricht the stick-man. Each re-imposed again. Food stocks What may prompt them to act that the other win cut hi are scheduled for distribution, sooner than even the West is throat first Who wUJ come out then, in the last minute, put unprepared for is hunger, the e- depneds on outside de- der heavy, armed guard, r.prt assort In hir viaw th Velopments. But. it is only a As a result, the masses thor- Br GEORGE W.

HERALD ED. NOTE! Early last March, after the death of Stalin. Mr. Herald was virtually alone among European correspondents la forecasting uprisings In the satellite states. Here Is his report en encouraging developments behind the curtain since the June 17 revolt In East Germany.

He has Just completed a trip along the fringes of the Soviet Empire. CHAPTER ONE Ivan. Go Home! BERLIN. Jt just isn't possible for the Russians to get back to where they stood in Eastern Europe be- fore June 17, 1953! They have passed the point of no return in thesatellite countries. The rest of the road for them gt directlon: OUTI ia me uuurmcu opmiuu of nearly all observers on the spot uu nave WUM.UCU ucveiujjiiicni3 words ever written.

The United States wants the peace conference to stick to Korean problems, leaving wider questions- to- be discussed elsewhere and at another time. The Communists could make hash of this desire, and of the conference itself, by dragging through the door left open by "et cetera" a host of questions not directly related to Korea. For example: Commuiist China's seating in the U.N., and turning Formosa over to Red China, which would mean asking the United States to kick off that island its Chinese ally Chiang Kai-shek. The U.N. Assembly could scramble itself badly at its session this week if it gets involved in an argument over what the diplomats at the conference should discuss.

It may skip that trap by letting the U.N. representatives to the conference figure out for themselves what should be talked about, after they're chosen. But just choosing the delegate nations to take part in the conference on the Uif. side will be a source of discontent. The United States through its U.N.

dlrgate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. has taken the stand that the truce agreement meant what it said when it spoke of diplomats of "both sides." Both sides, in the American view, mean: on one side, the North Koreans and the Chinese on the other, the United States, South Korea and those U.N nations which sent armed forces to fight in Korea. This would exclude neutrals from sitting at the. conference. The United States considers India, which sent only a medical unit to Korea, a neutral.

Russia has never been considered a neutral by this country and, if anyone had doubts, Asst. Secretary of State Walter S. Robertson last night said Russia had furnished the war supplies for the Chinese and North Koreans. Lodge was being polite last night when he said this country didn't think Russia should be approved by the N. to sit at the conference "on our side or -as a neutral." But Britain and other Western Powers disagreed.

They want Russia included at the conference, with U.N. approval. question of time until at least on of them will land in the same doghouse as ex-bigwigs Wilhelm Zaiaser, Frani Dahlem, George Dertinger, Karl Hamann and Paul Merker. Such a government cannot im- pose iu will either by sweetness oughly disillusioned no longer hide their feelings. Many defy the authorities at every occasion, in East-Berlin moviehouses, they start jeering the moment their beloved public figures appear on the screen.

"Ivan, go we heard by brutality. The whole ad- ministrative apparatus is in a state of disintegration. Promises Allied observers are confident are made, but not kept. Justice that nothing can now stop his-is dispensed arbitrarily; People tory from taking exactly that Some of them have fled a seethe ond time iince the rXln nvoltf them shouting again, "and take Grotewohl with you!" rniips. (CoPTM- UnUed rMtui Syndicate.

Inc.) TOMORROW: The Poles Are Fighting. By Jimmy Hatlo u.lk in mnA nf aila a tt they were cafeterias. While some are freed under the workers' pressure, other "imperialist KgenU" constantly take their place. Time ea, tat TRCO my CVIAJRS TUB 6ASM0RC. TUB CUMRMAH VTtUCUT MS THINKS lcWEWSUPAMIN-j RUftJAMENTARy 600NSCUJ8 4U.W8 RAISED cont Think hes PROCEPURS EVENA WEMBEROFl DUSTX WANNA 6EE i.

WANNA 6EE XlJQONAUeCJU- WANNA PUTN WNEST? I'M .1 here cujb BASOTZWAf SLOT MACHINES 60NNA CALL FOR A VOTE ON ThjS HE I WES Oaa Yaaa IM Eaoa twala EdUet aa4 Oaal Mt. W. Alcoch Huntof Edllo M. Tlpaaa CUf IUot Published Br Danville Advocate-Mtssengtr Co Inc. Entered as second -class msllar at the Poslofflce at Danville.

Kt-under art 1 March 1. 1875. Eight Involved In Potato Fighl LOUISA. Ky.t 17 i-Three persons were treated at a hospital, another Is in jail, two others are under- bond, and two more1 are being sought by police all because of a sweet potato patch. Lawrence County- Attorney Edwin D.Rice said yesterday a family owning property near here and another, family of tenants got Involved in a ruckus over who owned the potatoes.

Rice told this story. John Stiltner and his wife. Kel-sie, had been renting from Mack Burke and his mother, Mrs. Verlie Burke. And when the Stiltnera decided to move to Coleman an argument arose over the potatoes.

Stiltner claimed they were all his. The Burkes, claimed part ownership, saying the potatoes had been sharecropped. Saturday the Burkes allegedly beat Stiltner's 16-year-old son. Elmer, and then according to Rice" Stiltner said the Burkes could have the potatoes, that he didn't want any more trouble. Yesterday, however," the attorney's account said: The Burkes and another person returned and assaulted Mr.

and Mrs. Stiltner. He was treated at a Louisa hospital for a broken jaw, a back injury and cuts and lies, while Mrs. Stiltner received treatment for a broken nose and severe cuts and bruises. Mrs.

Burke, treated for cuts on the forehead, was placed under $700 bond, as was her son, Mack. Both are charged with assault and battery- and striking with deadly weapons, including rocks, clubs, bricks, and fists. Jailed on a charge of banding together is Louis Arreluin. Warrants have been issued for Mack's brother, Ben Burke, and an Ohio boy who was visiting the Burke family. Rhee Comments On Korea Talks WASHINGTON.

Aug. 17 OH rusri for U. S. food packages we are witnessing in Berlin today is cniy a beginning. According to West-Berlin May- fcr Ernst Reuter, a famine threa- tens the Soviet zone of Germany this fall and winter.

Of the 000 farmers whom Grotewohl im- piored to come back from the West only a few hundred re- turned. K-rauso thev diHn't hf arma back as promised and were treated as tritors, despite all pre- vtoui assurances. large parts of th East- German harvest will be lost this Thcyll Dq It Every OUR RECOGNIZES, HR.STROOOLC WE WAS MR.CUAJRUAN-r RISC TO A POINT OF CRCB? TO PROPOSE TU4T4S A MEMS OP RECUON6 THE CLU85 NDC8TEDMESS WE INSTALL. PARKING METERS THE. UXJN6E AhlD UBRARY 4 Writers oi This THN66FROHTHE FLOOR AND BUT TRY TO TO WORK ON asca IS WINDING UP CUJB IS UZ.PJ CK5 DEN TO CO THE QJOTlNdTUOSEOSe? OCT HUt A CO CUBS HE BELONfiS TO- 5 LC4ST "ok TUAUX AHOATtP TUB MATH hat to STAAJ ROG0Z3, VOS3 ELCVAOQ AvC- Russia Appears (Comttaaaa- From Page 1) claimed neutrality.

Colored Notes Mrs. Sophia P. dala To Sing Here Professor Harold G. Boggs of Port Clinton, Ohio, a blind pianist and Gospel singer and recording artist of King Recording Company, New York City, will present a full-line musical program on Thursday night at Allen Chapel Church, MiUedgeville, where the Rev. E.

W. Straus is pastor. An invitation is extended to all interested persons to hear ihe artist's program. Alfred B. Carson.

75. Succumbs In Hospital Alfred B. Carson, 75," died Sunday at Good Samaritan hospital, Lexington, after a short illness. Survivors include four daughters, Mrs. Vernon Alcorn and Miss Sue Ada Carson, student at Kentucky School for the Deaf, both of Danville; Miss Flora Carson, Stanford, and Mrs.

Delia Parker, Albany, N. anTir grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock (CST) Wednesday afternoon at Boneyville Methodist Church, LincolJ county, with the Rev. H. T.

Garth officiating. Interment will follow in the Bo-ntyville cemetery. The body will be removed Tuesday evenir-i from' funeral home in Danville to the residence. Mrs. John Segar's Rites Set Tuesday Mrs.

Meria Bell Segar died Saturday night in Ephraim McDowell Memorial hospital, following a brief illness. She was a resident of Old Wilderness road, Danville, and a. member of the AME Church of which she was a stewardess. Survivors are the husband, John Segar; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Terrance Davistown, Garrard county, and Mrs.

Mattie Ashbury, Akron," Ohio, and a number of nieces and nephews. Funeral services have been set for 2 o'clock (CDT) Tuesday afternoon at the AME Church, with the Rev. Gaddie officiating. Interment will be in Davistown. The body was removed to Smith-Jackson funeral home.

NONSWIMMER DROWNS FRANKFORT. Aug. 17 OP) Carl William Tatman, 26, drowned in the Kentucky River yesterday when the boat in which he and three others were riding overturned. Tatman couldn't swim and his companions were unable to help him. Legion Will Install New Officers Tuesday The regular meeting of Boyle Post 48, American Legion, is rcheduied for 7:30 o'clock Tuesday night, Aug.

18, at Legion Hall above Veatch's store on West Main street, with the installation of new officers to be a feature of the session, according to an announcement by J. L. Caldwell, adjutant, and George Thompson, commander of the post. The attendance of all Legionnaires was requested by the Winchester Firm To Extend Rail Lines NEW YORK. Aug.

17 OPV-The Codell Construction Company of Winchester, has been awarded the contract to construct a 12 -mile track extension by the Nicholas, Fayette and Greenbrier Railroad in West Virginia. Development of the West Virginia coal field with reserves estimated at 85 million tons will be possible with extension of the road, owned jointly by the New York Central Railroad and the Chesapeake St Ohio Railway, according to an announcement here yesterday. The new track will extend Jf rom the N. F. and G.

line near Russell-ville, W. south to Landisburg, W. Va. With completion of the extension, scheduled for midsummer of 1954, it is estimated that coal output will reach an average of a million tons a year within five years in the field. Much of the coal is of metallurgical coking grade.

Lexington Railway Strike Is Postponed LEXINGTON, Aug, 17 OPW Drivers for the Lexington Railway System postponed their threatened strike last night after receiving the firm's conditional wage offer a few hours before the strike deadline. The company's vice president and general manager, A. Z. Loon-ey, said the firm was offering a 5-cent pay increase on condition the busses stay in operation until the union membership has accepted or rejected it. Norris English, union president and business agent, said the union membership would vote on the proposal at a midnight session tomorrow.

Drivers and maintenance men had scheduled a strike when their old contract expired last midnight. But English said tie would notify the drivers of the proposal, which they, the membcrship4 may decide upon. By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 11 The, United Nations General Assembly meets in special session in New York today to take the second of three steps which could lead to peace, tfut may end in frustration, in Asia and elsewhere. First the Korean step: to decide who will take part In the peace conference.

Third step: the peace conference itself, opening perhaps in mid October, This is the background on the meeting of the General Assembly's 60 members. In reaching the armistice the two truce teams in Korea U.N. commanders and the Communists agreed the diplomats of sides" should take over once the fighting stopped. What should tha diplomats discuss? Should they talk just about Korea? Or should they go further afield and consider Asian problems in general? The agreement said among other thingsi the peaceful settlement of Korea, etc!" That et cetera may turn out to be one of the most important and most disastrous for any hope of peace coming out of the conference Russia Wants (Continued rrom Paga t) Federation and other Red-controlled groups. Russia offered to give up more than three billion dollars worth of German manufactured goods now earmarked, for her from East Germany, while proposing that reparations payments end by Jan.

1 and that the' Big Four powers' limit German payment for their occupation costs to 5 per cent of the annual revenues from East and West Ge.many. West Germany, with 43 million people, and the Red-ruled Eastern sector, with 18 millions, have been separated since the end of World War II. In recent there has been a marked spurt in sentiment for unification. Mossadegh In Power (Ceatiaaad From Paga 1) had been vacationing. They arrived in the Iraq capital unheralded and went into seclusion in a government guest house.

The Shah's flight to Iraq drew new government blasts at Britain, a favorite whipping boy for Moss- frdegh and his followers. Fateml told the mob the Shah, "a traitor ran away to the nearest British Embassy." This referred to Iraq'i friendship pacts with Britain. U. S. Embassy officials warned Americans to stay off the streets.

Embassy offices were closed yesterday. The government roundup of sus pected plotters put at least a dozen key opposition men behind bars. Chief among them was Deputy Mozafar Baghaie, long a major fighter against Mossadegh in the Parliament. Groom Pitchers For Atlanta Contest By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Manager Hugh Poland ordered two of bis strongest workhorses into harness tonight in an effort to knock Atlanta out of the Southern Association pennant race and strengthen the Nashville Vols' grip on first place. Poland picked Jack Harshman and Jim Constable, both lefthanders, as his starting pitchers in to-nigh t's important doubleheader with the Crackers.

Harshman will be going for his 20th victory of the season. He has lost seven. Constable has a 16-10 mark. Atlanta manager Gene Mauch named veteran righthander Art Fowler (13-8) to oppose Harshman, and John Fitzgerald l-3, a southpaw, to work against If Nashville could take both Atlanta would be pushed 5V4 games off the pace and dropped to third, half a game back of Memphis, idle tonight; The Vols came from behind yesterday to trim Atlanta 5-1, but their second game Was rained out and rescheduled for tonight. New Orleans topped Memphis 4-0 in the.

second game of a after the Chicks had grabbed the opener 7-6. Mobile and Little Rock split a doubleheader, the Bears taking the first game 3-2 and the Travs the" nightcap 2-1. Birmingham beat Chattanooga 5-2 in a game halted after five innings by rain. Assassination Of Syria Chief Rumored MAYFIELD, Aug. 17 UP) The first of eight 4-H and Future Farmers of America Dairy Cattle shows was slated here today.

It will be followed tomorrow with a similar event at MadisonvilleV where 14 Western Kentucky counties will be The shows, designed to promote the state's dairy industry are sponsored by the Kentucky Agriculture Department Other shows are slated for Bowling Green, Aug. 19; Campbcllsville, Aug. 20; Somerset, Aug. 25; Wil-liamstown. Aug.

26; Flemingsburg Aug. 27, and Shelbyville, Aug. 27. Visit Red Romania For First Time In Five Years President Syngman Rhee of South 1 Some diplomatic quarters pre 1 iL a a a ine irue meaning oi uiai re- volt, they say, was lost to most Westerners and apparently to many Commies, too -in the cas- cade of later events. This mean- ng is that te myth of Moscow teird everywhere behind the cur tain.

The satellite workers had-realized long ago that a small clique of parasites was exploiting them under false pretenses. What they didn't know was that they could do something about it. Today they know. They have learned how futile were the arguments of milk-toast intellectuals who claimed that a rebellion was impossible under a totalitarian regime. They have rebelled so successfully that they shook the whole Soviet system, toppled their foremost oppressor from his pinnacle.

The Fast-Germanns now understand that their rules are but contemptible Quislings who could not stay in power 24 hours without the protection of Soviet tanks. Above all, they have grasped this fundamental fact: Th Reds cannot shoot down proletarians without destroying the basis of their own revolution. Every gunshot killing a working maa goea right into the heart of the Soviet system. Cself. a How true this was became apparent during the recent disorders, when Soviet soldiers in many places applauded the crowd beating up German Communist officials.

In Magdeburg, Red Army officers and men even refused to intervene against workers storming a prisom Eighteen of the Russians were promptly put before a firing squad. But, that didn't solve Malenkov's problem of what to do. with troops treated to the sensational spectacle of a workers' revolt against Communism. and-that-what is going on behind the Curtain today is not a struggle between different nationalities the Germans against the Russians, for in stance. It is a struggle of slaves against tyrants, regardless of citizenship.

The people simply want to get rid of the regimes they hold responsible for constant terror, fear and purges and for their entire economic, social and political plight. That's why the unrest in East ern Germany has not subsided since June. New clashes and sit- down strikes took place during July in the Zeiss works in Jena, the buna synthetic rubber plants near Merseburg, the Leuna works at Halle, the blast furnace "com- binat'' in Fuerstenberg-Stalin-stadt and the chemical factories in Karl-Marxstadt (formerly Chemnitz). In the early days of August, the food riots were resumed. 1 In all these places and many others, the workers tore down Red posters and chalked on the walls "Ivan, Go Homer The only banners they left un touched read: "The cause of the working class, the cause of the people is invincible." Those Marxist words had ac quired a new ironic meaning! a It must not be forgotten, ob servers say, that most labor lead ers in the East zone are trained Marxists, xne tactics tney are a.

a now employing against the Red regime are those they were ori ginally taught to use against capitalists. For the moment they have de cided to concentrate on certain specific goals They will not re sume normal work until all their friends are freed, even those sen tenced to long prison terms by Frau Hilde Benjamin, the new Minister of Injustice. They also want all the econ romie concessions promised by the urotewohl government after June 17 and again on July 29. If thesej promises are not kept, they in tend to exercise new pressures. But their ultimate aim, as pro claimed a thousand times since June 17.

remains the same; moval of the-Grotewohl govern- -nis pari or me worm since historic Berlin uprising. EDITOR'S NOTE For the first time in five- years, four American correspondents have been permit- ted by Communist Romania to vis- it that forbidden Balkan country This Ts an article by the Associated Press chief of bureau in Vienna, who was among them. By RICHARD O'REGAN BUCHAREST, Aug. 17 Jit Com- munization of Romania has made the faces of 16 million Balkan people like identical masks but it has not yet destroyed their souU. Outside of Russia.

Drobablv no Soviet satellite has gone so far in if the Korean peace talks fail "the United States will resume the fight to accomplish the common objective" of unifying his embattled His "statement, made in a copyrighted interview with the magazine U. S. News and World Report, came in the wake of one by Walter S. Robertson that the United States has not mapped out a specific course of action if it is necessary for the Americans to. walk out of the peace talks.

Robertson is the assistant secretary of state who, as personal representative of Eisen- bower, persuaded Rhee not to ob struct the truce. He agreed that this government will quit the peace bringing down to one monotonous, nave made into military train-miserable level the thoughts and ing grounds, gambling casinos into actions of its people. lecture halls. Bordering on Russia. Romania's rich oil supplies are vital for th Soviet Union.

Every sign points to more and more Sovietization for Romania and Derhnrw it ovontnoi incorporation Into the Soviet Union as a 17th republic. talks in 90 days if it appears that the Reds are not negotiating 'n But deeply hidden, there is na- maae educate tional restlessness arid even a little the Rornanin masses to commu-organized resistance. nism than in other satellites. Yet, good faith; Robertson, in an NBC television interview yesterday, said the For the "Fourth World Festival United States has not agreed with of Youth" in Bucharest, the cap- ProDaganda has made most Ro-ital. Communist Romania admitted manians act Russian behavior Rhee to help him in resuming bat tie unless the Communists break shattering and deafening loud- speakers on the streets mix propa- ganda with Russian music.

No time is allowed for individual thought or action. If not attending political lectures or "cultural events, the Romanian today is rushed in buses to take part in parades. "Only the party bigshots can see the parades," explained a Western diplomat. "The public is forced to march in them." Witn lta own Peculiar morality, communism cut out completely oucnarest once-gay night life. Golt (a "decadent" sport) enterprise nas neen almost 100 per cent socialized.

Only a few Private artisans, like tailors and wno cannot gei ciotn or leather, remain. And a few Far more effort appears to have th0UKn massive, all-embracing Pauer" years oi communism have failed to make tha WESTERN AMATEUR GOLF TOURNAMENT UNDERWAY GRAND RAPIDS, Aug. 17 UP The 51st Western Amateur Golf Championship gets underway today at the Blythefield Country Club with Jimmy McHale of Philadelphia and, Harvie Ward of Atlanta, sharing the favorites role. With defendirrg champion Frank Stranahan sitting this one out, McHale and Ward, a pair of tested veterans, get top billing in the field of 153 golfers. Both have been finalists but have yet to taste victory in this tournament which dates back to 1899 and generally is ranked sec ond only to the National Amateur in stature.

All nluvrt will vhnrtt twn 1ft.ki1 rounds of Qualifying today and Tuesday, with 64 low scorers advancing to match play elimination, which runs from Wednesday through Sunday, The semifinals and finals will be at 36 hole. TOWN Tonight: "Lady from Texas" and "Saludos Aminos HUBERT dicted that India might withdraw her name in view of the strong U. S. opposition. Indian delegate V.

K. Krishna Menon already has declared his country is not a "candidate" for a place at the conference. The -resolution on the participation of Russia merely calls on the Assembly to recommend that the Soviet Union take part "provided the other side desires Lodge contended this was in line with his repeated demands that Russia must go as a representative of the Communists, if she went at all. He has insisted that Russia could not sit on the U.N. side or as a neutral.

British diplomats" feel that the Russians would not go to the conference as representatives ef the Red countries, which have, been branded as aggressor by the U.N1 This new formula, however, does not say specifically that Russia would be on one side or the other and it was felt by the British that it might be acceptable to all concerned. The only immediate objection came from Col. Ben Limb, South Korea's representative the U.N. He said the resolution should make plain that Russia would represent the Communist side. Middlecoff and Wall In 18-Hole Playoff FORT WAYNE, Aug.

17 (0 Veteran Cary Middlecoff "of Memphis and Art Wall Jr. of Pocono played an extra 18 holes today to decide the championship the Wayne Open Golf Tournament First place was worth $2,400 and second $1,800. The two matched 65s yesterday to finish the 72-hole distance in 265 each, breaking by four strokes the tournament record set by Jim Fer-fier of San Francisco in 1951. Birdie putts on the 450-yard 18th hole that dropped for Wall and didn't for Middlecoff hrew the tournament in a playoff. Dave Douglas fc Newark.

took 68 for 267 and third money of $1,400. Jimmy Clark for Laguna Beach. shot 67 for 268 and fourth placeworth $1,200. U. correspondents for the first time in five years and did iu brst majority minx like Russians to leave the impression that Buch arest Still is the "Paris of the Balkans." But beneath the fresh whitewash, the floodlights and the colored fountains are the signs of communism's "brave new Life has been communized to the smallest detail of existence, individuality, which despite op-pressinn always marked the national groups of Germans.

Hungarians, Greeks and Romanians, seems to have disappeared. Men wear the same shirts and shabby trousers and women identical cotton prints from the machines of the Gheorghiu-dej ready-made clothe! factory. The necktie has been abolished (except for the new Communist aristocracy) and costume jewelry is a rare, luxury item. To remain unshared is the mark of the "new "Tovaras" is the new greeting. Recreation has been mass-organized to the extent where even a Communist worker said: ''I have to get away for a few hours on my bicycle to escape the street radio." But he can't go far without police checks.

Hour after hour, insistent, nervo- the peace first. Rhee, in the magazine inter view, declared 1. -I believe the United States will resume the fight in order to accomplish the common objective of a unified Korea) because the U. B. honor and future secuf Ity will be at stake.

You know the United States is honor bound to reunify 2. South Korea may leave the peace talks in less time than 90 days "if it is apparent the Com munists have no intention of agree- ing to the fundamental require ment and merely Intend to use the conference for vicious slander and propaganda." 1 "I have informed President Eisenhower that under no circum- stances will we accept any neu tralization of Korea. All this would mean would be that we would have to lay down our arms and see our friendly allies withdraw, giving the Communists the chance to strike against us at any time of their cnoice. STARUTE DRIVE-IN Tonight: "Dective fitory" with Kirk Douglas. KENTUCKY Ends Today: Guy Madison in -Charge At Feather .1 'V 'i ND'J rcO 1 i Uull tit i Vi ir.

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