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ned a nn fig re C tus cep fas ty nthe en mutM n en se no R - -> acca s cues: hem s Cines | ~ --- ___ aLmNs FALLS, N: Y., SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 21, 1950 _ W EA THER - EASTERN NEW YORK;: Some cloudiness tonight; mostly cloudy and turning coolér Sunday. TFiSAL | V EDITIN - a. Twenve Packs Tweive Paces | Price Frv® CENTS 8000 NORTH KOREANS SEALED OFF BY PARATROOPERS: RUSSIA AND HER ALLIES DISCUSS W. GERMAN RE-MILITARIZATION | Warley of Seven Nations [DEWEY BLASTS ; ' ISJIIeng; WezrilzngabyoRst DEMOCRATS ON Mad“ & Roads Are Bfimkejd About Re-Arming Country RENT CONTROL Agd inst Red Forces in Rex: Sunchon-Sukchon Region Governor Renews Call for: By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eisenhower as Nominee for President . SEOUL, Oct. 21 (AP)-Quick moving U. S. parachute troops today sealed off 28,000 Red Koreans. This was nearly half of the estimated organized enemy fighting force left Forth of parallel 38. General MacArthur's headquarters said all main roads in f the Sunchon-Sukchon area, where the 4,100 Americans drop- HEW a“ “BS 0M ped out of the sky Friday, were blocked against the Reds. An estimated 63,000 Communist fighting men left in North Korea thus will not be able to mass for anv big future stand against Allied troops racing to bring the savage four months old war to an end, an intelligence officer said. Rubber Companies Are Restricted; Ban on Molasses Exports UN Committee Approves Resolution Calling for Big Power Peace Talks LAKE SUCCESS, Oct. 21 (AP)-The U. N. Political Committee today unanimously approved a resolution calling for big power peace consultations after rebuffing two at- tempts by Andrei Y. Vishinsky to gain recognition for the Chinese Communist regime. It was a rare show of unanimily in the U. N. The Soviet foreign minister fought hard to have the committee list specifically the name of the Chinese People's Republic among the great powers but the committee twice voted his motion was not acceptable at this time. This leaves the Na- tionalist Chinese still in their U. N. seat. The resolution recommends that the permanent members of the Se- curity Council - France, Britain, China, United States and the So- viet Union-meet and discuss all problems likely to threaten inter- national peace. Vishinsky urged the committee against an \ostrich\ policy but on the final count he voted yes. Refused Demand The committee, however, refused to accept his demand for the recog- nition of the Chinese Communists. The first vote was 26 against, 13 in favor and 16 abstaining, The PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Oct. 21 (AP)-Following her sharp warning that she would not tolerate re-militarization of Western Germany, Russia met with her European allies today to discuss that explosive subject. ' 'The meeting was called by the » n Soviet Union, which sent Deputy ARME. FQRSES Prime Minister V. M. Molotov as its spokesman. Molotov is a former Close Estimate of Total Soviet foreign minister. Moscow Radio and the official Needed Not Possible at Present Time \ostrich policy\ and recognize the Communist regime as the govern- ment of Ching. Nationalist China answered that the question was not acceptable at the present stage of the debate and the committee upheld that view. Asks Demand Be Refused T. F. Tsiang, Nationalist China's chief delegate, promptly answered that the Communist regime is & Russian satellite and does not rep- resent China. He called on the committee to toss out the Russian demand, A clash came today when Vishin- sky called on the committee to list the names of the powers in the resolution and to give China's place to the Mao Tze-tung government.! The Chinese nationalists hold the U, N. seat, || He said the facts are that the Communist regime in China-which he always refers to as the Chinese NEW YORK, Oct. 21 UP) - Gov. Thomas E. Dewey accused the Democrats last night of rent control corruption in New York City and once again called for General Dwight D. Eisenhower as a presi- dential candidate in 1952, Dewey picked up his reelection campaign where it was interrupted early this week by the Hanley let- ter disclosures, and spoke both by regular radio and in television \man in the street\ interviews. One TV questioner asked Dewey how he was \going to get Eisen» | hower to run\ in the face of his denial of White House ambitions? \All I know is that I hope he will,\ Dewey answered. \He has a great sense of duty and if the duty is clear I should most certainly hope he will respond to it when the call is made.\ Czechoslovak news agency reported the seven-nation meeting started yesterday. Deputy Prime Minister Zdenek Flerlinger, representing Czechoslovakia, opened the confer- ence and was elected chairman. Molotov flew in from Moscow by special plane. Other foreign dele- gates had already arrived and met him - ato Prague's | flag-decorated | Ruzyne airport. ~ Foreign Ministers They were Foreign Ministers Min- cho Neychey of Bulgaria; Zgymunt Modzelewski of Poland; Gyula Kal- lai of Hungary; Ana Pauker of Ro- mania; George Dertinger of Eastern Germany and V. Natanajli, Albanian minister to Moscow. An - official - announcement Prague said the ministers would Headquarters said the Reds may be able to move some of the trapped 28,000 men over hill roads but that' their heavy equipment was lost. What little opposition the North Koreans tried to put up against the paratroops was speedily overcome. A MacArthur spokesman said there tis still no evidence of an organized 'defense line north of the present battle zones nor of any \auxiliary\ Army to Decentralize Accounting Division Of Its Finance Dept. WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (P)-The Army announced today that the accounting division of its Finance Department, now located at the WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (P)-The Army plans further calls on the Selective Service system for physi- cians, dentists and veterinarians. It said today that the request al- ready made to Selective Service for in \Additional requests will be made later as necessary to meet our re- powers-France, Britain and the United States-Sept. 19 which dis- via a television screen. questioners could see each other express itself on the question of recognizing the Chinese Commun- ment to that effect before the com- mittee. curbs on installment buying may be imposed by the government to com- The Army did not say what caused this decision, but the finance A . £ : r M second vote was 35 against, 12 in| People's Republic-represents China r a \~ leapital Likewise, reports of -are 922 physicians, 500 dentists and 100|\discuss questions which arose in| As before, Dewey sat in the TV h ina WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (P) -| Army Finance Center in St. Louis, C3PW5} & rep of pre-ar veterinarians by Jan. 15 represents connectiog with the decision of the | studio while another camera was set fagfieaggxgéfisgzafiaiu did not angatshoflcérge lifteit afiofilerfige Presidential - Assistant - John - R.] will be decentralized. ranged assembly points for shattered __ only part of the Army's total needs.| New York conference of the three| up on the street. Both he and his! a great powers. P Steelman - feels that still tighter North Korean units are becoming rare. Resistance in Pyongyang, the cap- tured Red capital, is flickering out, the intelligence officer said. Ameri- can tanks have crossed the Taedong ists. It only decided that Vishinsky could not wedge the issue into a resolution by Iraq and Syria calling for the big five to consult on their center has been the subject of at least six investigations in recent years. Acknowledging \Let's not be like ants, like birds, . or like ostriches, who seeing ap- bate inflation, ; h Moreover, he told the Mt. Hol- proaching danger hide their heads | , t ; under their wings,\ he said. He said Alumnae | Association _ last | cussed the gemilitarization of Ger- many.\ (The big three foreign ministers quirements,\ - a - spokesman said. \Current - uncertainties - preclude firm estimates being made more Dismisses Letter In his radio address, Dewey dis- missed the Hanley letter with only last May that n than &a few months in advance.\ _ |announced Sept. 19 they had agreed | ;; ; disagreements. un \ostrich policy\ is unacceptable Right that other types of controls, g157.0999,000 in erroneous pa ments 204_are in the city, Small pockets . Selective Service is to meet the|to strengthen German economically brief mgntlin' ats . Xt the outset. Vishinsky demanded | and he insist}; my naming the linem- \may become necessary. . | and over payments of servicemen's Of Reds and snipers pecked away f pending request from about 21,101) and defensively and allow it a \mo- He said the Democrats were USIOE | a ~, ing nommittee steer clear of an | bers. hint at new restric-| allotments had been made, the, 4° Nations troops. + medical men who registered last|bile police force,\ but there would | SMA! tactics when they charged it - tions came at the end of a day U®-| &rmy said at that time that the , The intelligence officer seid the Monday. be mo resurrection of a German £15333 flvéiflfic’fffrfifia afitihgoi) agi L h p £ d A d & % t ing wgfihiv tional P id tion Au. | OVET_ Deyments | resulted.. from the two North Korean Army Corps As soon as the medical draft law | national army.) a ef . e National Production Au- | eeet-em-paid\ philosophy of -| headquarters organizations h ave has produced enough doctors to Big Three Get Notes for Dewey's renomination. enman erends mlnlSi-ra ion (a) restricted rubber com- f n pNiosop iy, Of War & thority panies in their use of materials and (b) set aside for the defense pro- gram the entire production of stain- less steel containing columbium. 2. The Commerce Department or- dered a ban on all exports of mo- lasses, a principal source of indus- trial alcohol. Limits Tire Production The rubber order limits tire manu- facturers and other users to T5 per cent of the amount of natural rub- ber they consumed in the year ended June 30. It sets consumption of all rubber, including synthetic, at 84 per cent of the base year's been written off. He said the com- manding generals are believed to have escaped. Local guerrilla bands apparently were operating on their own. \By Go#'s grace we live in a na time and the demobilization. tion where smear always rebounds on the smear artist,\ he said, \and where the people have the power to judge men by their untruths, and reject them.\ 'Then Dewey lit into the Demo- crats, accusing the national admin- istration of letting the nation down by allowing rent control to lapse for a time. He charged that this meet current requirements, an Army. spokesman said - reserve medical captains and lieutenants who have been called to active duty involun- tarily and who have had previous military duty will be relieved pro- gressively if they request it. Slight- ly more than 100 doctors now on active duty will be eligible for such ' relief. f Last Monday's registration in- eluded medical men trained at gov- ernment expense, or deferred from military service during training, who thereafter served more than 80 days but less than 21 months in Only a few hours before the Prague conference, Russia made public the contents of identical notes sent to the United States, Framde and Britain, charging that the Western nations were reviving German millitary might in their zones. The notes rejected a Western charge that the People's Police of Communist-ruled East Germany ac- tually is a military organization, [let the New York City Democratic and warned the Soviet Union would | leaders set up their own control not tolerate revival of \the German, system and \things went from bad regular army in West Germany.\ | to worse.\ He said he had sworn testimony On Foreign Policy and Attacks Republicans as Obstructionists HANLEY CALLS ON LYNCH 10 PROVE WORTH NEW YORK, Oct. End Is Near General MacArthur, who super- vised the big parachute drop Friday, said he is confident the end of the fighting and triumph for United Nations forces is near at hand. Five South Korean divisions-the sixth, seventh, eighth third and capital-are preparing to rush to the Manchurian border to cut off escape routes for remaining Red MONTICELLO, N, Y., Oct. 21 (P)-Sen. Herbert H. Lehman, Demo- cratic candidate for reelection, defended the Truman administration today as the author of a strong, constructive foreign policy-and attacked the Republicans as. obstructionists, Lehman condemned the Republi- can policy in a speech at a rally of the Sullivan County Democratic Committee at Kiamesha Lake near here. \Certain alarmists would have, you believe-as they often repeat- that the United States has 'no for- eign policy,\ Lehman said. ''These very persons who give voice to this irresponsible charge 21 Gov. Joe R. Hanley says Rep. Walter (P-Lt. s R © | forces. the armed services or public health| 1m washington, Secretary of State from a democratic precinct captain do so in the full knowledge it is| 4S€¢. y di | i service. Dean Achescgnto told a newys confer- he did not name tr?“ 'things pwere ivflca git Aagfis false. b, Ofiigialts said this would give fixfielgggfilgfigltciejt’ozngalbfigi 213003? aohgggedaxgg goggsntlsemceczfifig ici - 4 ; e p is 7 .' manu s I s ppeare g t t £313,ffifiifiifififimfigsEffie ence yesterday the United States pretty much wide open to any 'The truth is that the U. S. today MANliacturers about the same ; that he's fit to be governor. battle. They surrendered in droves will reject the Russian protest, He insisted creation of legitimate police forces in Western Germany does not represent a back-door attempt to restore the German Army. The United States is favoring re- armament of Western Germany as part of the European defense frame- work. Britain accepted the idea, but wants the other North Atlantic Pact nations to rearm first, France alone among the major Western powers has held out against the pro- has a foreign policy as firm and as amourt of rubber they were getting olitician of any standing.'\ P Y vigorous as it has ever had.\ , before the Korean war \Crooked Rent Control\ \So there you have it,\ Dewey said. \Crooked rent control, with both people and landlord at the mercy of whoever had the fattest pocketbook or the fattest political ciumsv [IAR contracts-and devil take the hind- most,\ - Dewey called his own Republican ENR state rent act \a great, sound law\ $4 (19,3335 vfifjfi AI: fiififi alert: and praised the new state rent 40- rieq his campaign into South Cen- ministrator, Joseph D. McGoldrich registered between now and next January, at a date yet to be fixed by Selective Service headquarters, Army officials do not anticipate early need for these but said their registration will let the government know how many doctors, dentists and veterinarians are available and ; where they are, in case they should I be needed eventually. Hanley. Republican candidate for: in“ “1:11“ proups. rib/lg?) Glam iii”) ; . f newed - assurances that no tire the U. S5 Senate. attacked Lynch, WAX prisoners are G\ y the 68, no??? gzsfiSSetté? tnf‘i'ffégfifil‘éufi? shortages is in sight. \O 4m) ryomocratic-Liberal Party nominee __U $ Fir: Cavairymen and the weapons only-although these are: The action on molasses fits into | FOF governor, at &a Repubpcan rally parachute~ troops linked forces_ over needed in large quantity. the rubber picture since alcohol is | Droadcast over a state radio hookup,, the 30-mile stretch between fallen True strength, he said, means a| USed in great quantities by the! \I think the people of the Statejpz‘fif‘ ang and Sunchon to the strong economuc system that under- synthetic rubber plants which the | of New York are getting a little no; 'A raw ; goes constant improvement, and it EOvermnment is pressing back into | tired of watching Mr. Lynch came;, AD Army war summary said the means good housing and sound na-| Service. paign for the high office of gov-: PBTSUIOODETS had secured their ob- tional health. To Buy Alcohol ernor solely on the basis of a letter' 32cm“ in the Sunchon and Suk- Terms U. S. \Strong\ The government has announced it . I wrote last Sept. 5.\ Hanley said. © °NOD TCS. to is w Iwill st 5 chic. ¥ . f . 'The South Korean Sixth Division The happy fact is we are strong: art buying alcohol from whis- | \After all, if he (Lynch) wants joined the paratroopers a few hours They re- g, complished. A ) - FRENCH HAVE QUIT LANGSON posal. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer last night called on his but he ruled out re~militarization. Molotoy's name seldom has been as \one lone courageous Democrat.\ FRENCH SEEK tral New York today, after calling Governor Dewey \the clumsiest Har in political history.\ '\so full of holes and so contra- today,\ he said. \We are not as strong as we will be, but any man who tries to tell you that the United to tell you something that is un- true and has been disproved by | key distillers in December. The i Distillers Spirits Institute announc- ed last night it has offered to deliver bium, &a corrosion-resistant alloy, is ; to be governor * * * it is up to him , to prove to the people that he is ‘fit for the office He must also Stainless steel containing colum- | istration in Albany doesn't measure, after the Americans landed. One of Largest people to assume their share of Lynch claims Dewey's version of | Statts-in & military sense, or any 10,000,000 gallons over the next two | try to show-and I don't envy him' The air dron was one of the largs Western Europe's defense burden, the controversial Hanley letter was | Other sense-is not strong, is trying months, the job-that Tom Dewey's adnun-.. est in the history of warfare and the only one in this four-months- . dictory as to be hopelessly beyond I , ;up.\ old war that has claimed an esti- in the news for months. Last belief.\ events. used in the manufacture of jet air- Hanley referred briefly to the mated 200.000 lives since it started - ' \ August there were reports he was \The great prosecutor has be- | ,. Lehman then quoted \the Repub-| craft engines, surgical | instruments | letter he wrote to a GOP supporter On June 25, AUM @ WRL % au 5, SAIGON, Indochina, Oct, 21 (P)- French troops today evacuated their frontier headquarters fortress of Langson, which guarded the main invasion gateway to Indochina from Communist China. The privotal French post for the defense of north Indochina yielded to Communist-led Nationalist troops after a French occupation of 78 sources and training bases in Red China. . The French Army communique said the evacuation was effected to: permit the regrouping of French forces into new strategie mobile re- serves, It said the French would take the offensive as soon as the reorganization and disposition is ac- 'The communique said the with- drawing French troops were fight- ing \some engagements of minor importance.\ The French air force was up in. strength over the frontier to cover the French retreat. 1 The communique did not state the destination of the Langson gare rison, but merely indicated it was \towards new positions.\ Langson was the sixth post the. French Have given up within & month along the mountainous fron« tier, stronghold of Moscow-trained Ho Chi Minh's Nationalist guer- rillas. All that remain are Laokay and Moneay on the western and eastern ends of the former French, border defense line. Military experts already have ad- | mitted that the frontier garrisons no longer are éfféctive in their] main function, thatof stopping trafe fic between the Vietminh and the 'Chinese - Communists who | the French charge 'have been training the guenillas on a large scale re- cently, 3 visiting Peiping, capital of Com- murnist China, for talks on Asian af- fairs, R Andrei ¥. Vishinsky succeeded Molotov as foreign minister March 5, 1949, and is now attending the United Nations Assembly meeting in New York. HURRICANE IN FIZZLED OUT 'TAMPA, Fix., Oct. 21 (P) - A nurisance hurricane which failed to live up to advance billing fizzled out in a Florida wilderness today. 'The rich Tampa resort area, once: threatened with a possible knock out punch, escaped entirely. 'The Flofids highway patrol said the storm hit inland just north of Cedar Key, the fishing village devas- tated by the Labor Day hurricane. ° \Winds were well below the 75 mile an hour minimum for a hurricane. Apparently the oncé threatening blow was breaking up harmlessly in that sparsely inhabited section of swamps and woodlands some 100 miles north of Tampa. _ For long hours the storm, vated at \15 to 90 miles an hour, was pointed slam bang at Tamps, largest city on the Florida west coast (population 125,000). Then it lost steam and veered north |__ _ . Meterologist W, W. Talbott of the Tampg Weather Buréau said he he- eved a mass of dry air over this. 'ares caused the storm to disinte- grate. -, «Hurricanes can't live without moisture,\ he explained. \The séc- tion from Tarpon Springs on south. 'has got all it's going to get.!\ at a Cabinet meeting today. trusts an armed Germany. ament. Frenchmen. al, Communist Propaganda 'mext year's election - have paganda succeeds. 'This is one reason why the So- cialists are taking so strong a stand against the \principle\ of German rearmament. more than the fact. lowing Foreign Minister matter of principle: % AGREEMENT ON GERMAN ARMS _I-‘A_RIS, Oct. 21 (P)--The conflict within French Premier Rene Plev» en's coalition government over re- arming Germany comes to & head The thorny subject may tear Germans three times in the past 70 years, France traditionally mis- Today the Communists are taking. advan- tage of that tradition to portray the U, S. as an enemy of France, because she favors German rearm- The wounds of the last German invasion are still fresh enough so that the Red propaganda hits are- sponsive spot in the minds of many The Socialists «- already vieing with the Communists for votes in the most to lose when Commiinist pro- Yesterday the Socialist deputies: voted 30 to 5 against the \principle\ The Socialists are & minority in the Cabinet, They are outnumber ed by the Radicals and the slightly xéightiesb Popular Republicans} }. The Radicals think the Socialists are butting their heads against a stone wall in opposing the U. S. or Germany. Many of the MRP-fol C 1 Robert ;Schuman-want the Germans taken Into the Europen community as a come a craven, evasive defendant,\ the Democratic nominee for gover- mor asserted. Lynch headed for Oneonta and Norwich from Schenectady, where last night he: 1-Called Dewey \the hatchet man\ in what Lynch described as \'a conspiracy 'between Wall Street bankers and Republican politicians\ to \destroy (Lt. Gov. Joe R.) Han- ley's gubernatorial dream.\ 2-Charged that Dewey was \the epnstructive legislation for labor, agriculture and ordinary people.\ At Binghamton tonight, Lynch delivers the first in a series of speeches outlining his policies and the program he proposés, hammer on the letter Hanley wrote to Rep. W. Kingsland Macy, Suf- folk County Republican leader. Lynch says the letter is evidence that Dewey bought off Hanley to give up his gubernatorial candidacy, in favor of Dewey, and to run for the Senate instead, Hanley wrote that if he consented to take the Senate nomination, \I am definitely assured of being able to clean up my financial obligations within 90 days. . . Saying that Dewey had called the Democratic state candidates illiter- ate, Lynch commented: \Well Dewey found out in a time that we weren't illiterate, that we could read quite capably, espe- clauy’ letters written by Republi- cans.\ ABOLISH SPECIAL BADGES BATAVIA, N, Y, Oct. 21 (P- \Special police\ badges have been abolished by Chief George J. Boothby. - 10, Boothby. said investigation of 60 such badges disclosed some holders mission to movies and the nearby harness race track. Lynch continued last night to‘ were flashing them to gain free ad- lican leader of this state\ as saying America was \bleeding from weak- ness\ at the time of the first set- backs in Korea. \I thank God that this careless and intemperate accusation-this political accusation-was refuted on the battlefield of Korea, so that it now needs no refutation from me,\ he said. * He then examined the Republican voting record in Congress, and ac- cused the GOP leaders-especially stand-which he said was unchanged -with his own record in the Senate | during the past year. f \Phony Liberals\ \You must decide,\ he said, \whether leadership ought to be left where it is-in the sure hands of those who by firm adherence to a broad, reasonable and imaginative policy have guided us safely so far.\ Lehman last night called the Re- publicans \phony liberals.\ \This year they are saying they are just as liberal as we are,\ he told three New York City Demo- cratic rallies, \What we have ac- complished, they say they can ac- complish-but more efficiently. \It shouldn't fool anybody. They are just playing a part and the acting is bad.\ , He said the Republican Party has { opposed every libera, measure that short' has been brought forward in the last 20 years. - AIRLIFT TO CONTINUE HONOLULU, Oct. 31 QP) - The airlift ferrying troops and materiel over the Pacific Ocean At the rate of & plane every T5 minutes, \will continue indefinitely after the end of the shooting war in Korea.\ | Maj. Gen. Laurence S. Kuter, Military | Air Transport | Service (MATS) commander, made that cléar yesterday on a stopover here | en route home from & global tour of MATS Hasés. and chemical equipment. Except for his reference to install- ment buying, Steeiman made no specific mention of probable new control moves. But in broad terms he re-echoed the administration's warnings that the American people face a time of sacrifice \for years to come.\ He checked this back to what he \upon a course designed to divide the nations of the world.\ added: \Already in some areas there is a shortage of trained workers.\ QUINTUPLETS VIEW SIGHTS OF NEW YORK NEW YORK. Oct. 21 (P) - The Dionne Quintuplets, shy but smiling faced up like veterans before the pop of photo flash guns, as they got in their first good look at big city sights yesterday. The 16-year-old Quints-Yvonne, Marie, Cecile, Emilie and Annette- were accompanied on the tour by 11 classmates from Villa Notre Dame High School near their home town of Callander, Ont. With Francis Cardinal Spellman as their host, the celebrated sisters sandwiched in sightseeing with a radio broadcast, a visit to St. Vin- dent's Hospita,, and posed holding bablés at the New Cork Foundling Hospital. _ In addition, they appéared at New York's Cathedral High School to sing \The Sidewalks of 15§w Yofk.\ called Russia's postwar embarkment : saying that in a conference with} Gov. Thomas E. Dewey he was as- | sured of a clean financial slate by, consenting to run for the Senate; instead of the governorship. i Dewey has demied that any kind of payoff or wrongdoing was in- volved. i Dewey. said Hanley, \stands head and shoulders above\ the three Democrats who preceded him in' the governor's - chair-Alfred E. Smith, Franklin D. Roosevelt and to the United States Senate in place! of the Democratic nominee. \My reason is this; I believe the Truman administration has shown itself unfit to govern this country. I think we need a Republican Sen- ate and a Republican House of Rep- resentatives to protect this nation until 1952 when we can change the national government.\ Atom Scientist Of Britain Said To Be with Reds ROME, Oct. 21 (P-Rome news- papers broke out in a rash of scare headlines today reporting Italian- born British atom scientist Bruno Pontecorvo had skipped behind the iron curtain. R Swedish airlines officials said he visited Stockholm last month and then flew to Finland. His father in Milan said he doubtless would be back in England on schedule in January. No one yet has besh able to con- tact Pontecorvo, who became a Brit- ish citizen during the war and work» Ted on atom research projects in Canada and England. He came to Italy with his wife and three chil= Afterward, General MacArthur landed in Pyongyang and ordered the South Koreans to rush to Red China's Manchurian border as fast as possible. 'There was no indication the gen- eral planned to send American or other foreign United Nations troops to the border where an incident might involve Russia or Red China. The border is 80 miles north of Sunchon. The South Korean Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Divisions are . years. , . apart Pleven's middle of the road only one (American) looking for Senators Taft (R-Ohio) and Wherry! Steelman said the vast mobiliza- Herbert H. Lehman. moving up from there. ys Control of Langson swings wide j team, but most observers think a. defeat\ in Korea. (R-Neb) of trying to sabotage for- tion program to rearm America| \Now as for myself,\ Hanley said,! In hasty retreat, the North Ko- the frontier door for Ho Chi Minh's compromise can be found. 3-Contended that Dewey's recora Sign aid. would mean that mullions of new \I have only one reason for asking Yean high command spoke of heavy Soviet-backed regime to supply s Invaded and occupied by the| as governor was \devoid of any Lehman contrasted the GOP workers will be needed, and he the people of my state to send me) figting around Pyongyang. But As- sociated Press war correspondents there reported very little fighting as American, British and South Ko- rean troops mopped up the area. Little Fight Left All reports, except from the OChin« nampo area, west of Pyongyang, in- dicated there was very little fight left in the North Koreans. A few scattered bands of guerrillas struck and skuiked to the hills in isolated cases. R The U. S. 24th Infantry Division was expected to take Chinnampo, port for Pyongyang. 'The bag of prisoners there increased hourly. South Korean troops, pushing northward along the Korean east coast, were 956 miles south of Man- churia and racing north. They cap- tured Hamhung, which is 110 miles south of the border, . One guerrilla force of 1.000 Reds seized briefly a hydroelectric plant at Hwachon, 55 miles northeast of Seoul. The plant was not damaged by the Communists who fled north from Hwachon. Red brutality to war prisoncts spurred Allied troops in their efforts to free the thousands of South Korean and United Natioas prison« ers seized when the Reds almost overran the whole peninstla. They particularly wanted to find the remmants of 283 Americans who participated in a death march from dren recently for a vacation. { Seoul to Pyongyang