Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1952.
RIDGWAY DEPLORES QUERIES
OF "WHY ARE WE IN KOREA?”
TOKYO, Feb. 22—(AP)—Gen
eral Matthew B. Ridgway said
wednesday night it is deplorable
:hat many Americans still ask
«Why are we in Korea?”
The Supreme Allied Commander |
declared the pattern of Communist
intentions is “now spread across]
the world where even the blind
can see.” 1
For his part, Ridgway said there
can be no question of the “valid
ity and purpose” of U. S. fighting
in Korea “against that deliber
ately planned, unprovoked aggres
sion.”
«To have done otherwise,” he
said, “would have been a repudi
ation of every principle we had
previously professed.”
Ridgway spoke at the annual
convention of the Far East De
partnrent of the Reserve Officers
Association.
He made no mention of the Ko
rean armistice talks at Pamun
jom.
Ridgway said the same situa
tion exists today that Washington
found in 1775 when he wrote that
one of his hardest jobs was to in
duce the people to believe there
was “danger until the bayonet is
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pushed at their breasts.”
“Our country,” Ridgway sald,
“still has today many people
whose intelligence level offers no
slightest excuse for a similar men
tal outlook on this problem.
“With the pattern of Commun
ist intentions spread across the
world where even the blind can
see, neither the seeming insula
tion of distance, nor the native
born of a sheltered life, can plead
the slightest excuse, nor abate one
igta of our individual responsibil-
Y.
“To do otherwise than oppose
aggression in the future, within
our capabilities, will be to ac
knowledge as sterile every sacri
fice Anrerica has made since it
obtained independence,
| “We have heard and we still
hear at times, and I regret to say
from Americans referring to Ko
rea, ‘Why are we there? I think
the question discredits him who
asks it.”
The general said he feels Amer
icans seeking solutions to present
day problems tend to “overlook
the rich recordings of what our
predecessors thougth and did.”
¥6% Dr. Logan's Wife
S [ e,
o %‘. "
THE STORY: Jennet Yogan,
wife of the aging and failing Dr,
Gus Logan, is trying to shake off
her attraction toward the young
ful Peter Surinov, biophysicist
doing atomic medicine research at
Angel's hospital. Believing that a
contribution toward slum eclear
ance, in which Peter is interested,
will clear her conscience and al
low her to tell Peter she must see
him no more. Jennet sells some
Jewelry, raises SI2OO and gives it
to Peter in a certified check. Max
well Cota, head of the hospital and
landlord of the slums, has been
trying to oust Peter from the hos
pital staff, He has tried to brand
Peter as a Communist because
Peter objected to the loyalty oath.
Failing in this because of Dr. Lo
gan's support of Peter, Cota
searches Peter’s rooms and finds
the check endorsed by Jennet
Logan,
* * *
XXIII
THE meeting of the Medical Ex
ecutive Committee was orderly
enough during the opening
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
speeches, Walter Pelletior’s speech,
delivered last, had not been re
cived as he could have hoi)od, as
his family had received it, but
to listen, another to want to hear,
After it, the discussion period rav
eled to wrangling.
Into the heated argument, Gus
Logan, who was perhaps the only
composed member of the group,
his hands sleeping on his blue
gabardine sleeves, his magnifed
blue eyes gentle as flowers, in
jected a peacemaker’s note.
“Gentlemen,” he said in a tone
of exemplary- quiet, “we are all
beginning to repeat ourselves and
on one seems to be convineing
anyone else. I think we're forget
ting that we're not enemies. We're
all here for the same purpose-—
that is, to act in the best interests
of the hospital. There is really no
question here of a difforence in
politics. We all hate Communism.
Let’s not put each other on trial.
“Peter Surinov is on trial to
night because of the note which
he appended to the loyalty oath
and we are here soley to inter-
pret and so to estimate the im
portance of that appendage. Now
Mr. Cota and those who agree with
him consider this an unpardonable
aet of bad faith, of insubordina
tion. Dr, Pelletier and those who
agree with him feel that it was
merely a portest, not against the
hospital, but against a measure
which Surinov felt restricted his
liberty as an American.”
- . %
SOME of the men nodded assent,
and Logan continued. *“Now,
our loyalty oath, as it was phrased,
tested only subversives of the
Left. I think all of us will agree
that the Ku Klux Klan is organ
ized along fascistic lines. Peter
Sourinov’s posteript, however le~
gally gratuitous, serves tor avow
that he is also not a subversive
of the Right. Viewed in this light,
there is no question of disloyalty
or insubordination, no damage or
disrespect to the hospital and its
administrators., T, therefore, move
that the discussion be closed and
I make a further motion that Peter
Surinov be permitted to continue
his excellent work as a member
of the Department of Radiation
Therapy, with the suggestion that
his immediate superior, Dr. Pelle
tier, have a little talk with the boy
and explain to him the cooperation
expected of him as an emxiloye of
Angels University Hospital.”
Dr. Pelletier knew a moment’s
envy—as one writer feels toward
another whose ideas seen fresher
than his own—and then admira~
tion topped envy. His clapping
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TOURS U, S,~The Rev. Mar=
tin Niemoeller, leading Protes
tant pastor in Western Germany
and a highly controversial figure
in postwar Germany, arrived in
New York by plane for a speech~
making tour of the United
States. Niemoeller, a vigorous
opponent of rearming West
Germany, recently completed a
week’s visit to Moscow.
was interrupted by the Chief of
Staff's pounding gavel. Maxwell
Cota jumped to his feet, and his
deeply wrinkled face was black as
a plum,
"Sog?istry! Nothing but lorhhr
try!” Maxwell Cota shrilled. “And
your motion is premature. There
is still a further goin’t of discus-~
sion, Dr. Logan, suggest that
your sympathies with Peter Suri
ndv are deeper than we think!”
“You better say ‘what you mean,
Cota,” he warned,
“I think you're the one who's
going to have to make yourself
clear, Dr. Logan. Whether you
like being on trial or mnot, I'm
afraid that’s where this piece of
paper puts you.” He threw down
the photostatic copy of the check,
shouting to those who had taken
twisted positions in an attempt to
read the paper. “A certified check
in the amount of SI2OO lignod over
by Jennet Lecky Logan to Peter
Surinov! Now, Dr. Logan, maybe
you'll explain what's going on
here.,”
Dr. Logan’s head bent to the
thick paper, curling at the odges
because of hasty removal from de
veloper solution, on which was
photographed the front and back
sides of the check. When Dr.
Logan could tear his eyes from
the pa?er, he said through mask
lips, “I don’t believe you, Cota,
You're framing me—this {s some
trick—you made this whole dirty
hingup....”
“Watch your tongue, sirl You
must be able to recognize your
own wife's handwritting.”
* & %
DR, LOGAN’S hand clutched his
PAGE NINE
lattfll:&d. hung from it wuntil
the gave way with a small
sound. He put his free hand up
to ward off the faces and bedies
that crowded him, whose breaths
on his face used up the breath he
needed in his lungs., “My wife
....”" Logan choked. “You le—
cheap, dirty 1ie....”
That was when Gus str;‘md
up out of his seat and still g
at the ng‘ot his lapel, he took
small bent-kneed steps out of the
room,
Pelletier got u? and followed
Logan, In the all, he saw the
stricken man’s hand reach into his
ocket, saw him slip the pill into a
sage controted and motionless with
pain,
There was a bench a s:lt]-d or
two down the hall, and etier
half-carried the man to it, sat
him carefully on it.
(To Be Continued)
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