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London Express Servico
POLITICAL NEWSFRONT by W. J. BROWN, M.P.
TUC ideas are years
behind time
D
should
to
-01
the Höcialist
Equally out of dato is the thinking of the TUC ebout the right to strike. Some unlons want that right re slored. Others want to wait a EMOCRACY has many two years, and
have year, and to consider the mat-
ter meantime, It occurs virtues, but one great been evident for four.
It saya that 11:0 present neither that the right drawback. In a demo- level of life in Britain cannot strike is
quite incompatiblo crncy the Government must be raised except on the basis with carry with it the general duction: and that the Ides of
ot a general increase pro Stato or the Welfare State.
In the Socialist assent of the nation. The taxing profits further
State, Is im bring mines, railways, docks or circumferenco must approve practicable and even harmful other essential service to o before the centre can effec- t then proclaims that there standstiil, is to commit A
must not
be any lowering of crime against tively get going.
the State. I the standard of life, nor any anyone tried it in Russla ho reduction in food subsidies or would the social services.
be for Biberia or the fring sqund straight away. Now if that document had without hope of trial or beno- been ied four years ago, fit clergy.
Now it takes a long time for trulh 10 penetrolo from rentre to circumference. Urually It takes years! But events do hot wait. The result is that current polley is usually years behind current necessity.
In
recently, the. miners put of work
But it is equally incom- and if the economic truths ti coritained had been brougin patible with the Welfare home to the masses, then our State. In a Welfare State, the position today would be very Government contracts
to pro- We have seen this illustrat different from what it in.
vide the citizen with full In the ed, with ghastly results, twice
intervening four employment and social securl- In our lifetins, In, forelgu of years there have been such ty. It can deliver neither un- fairs. In spite of all the war- changes in our situation in the less the communily, goes on nines, we were prepared world that thin document working,
war of 1014 now hopelessly out of date. neither for the
Australia. strio of 23,000 We the war Hor
of 1830.
But even
the ace of defeal Council were up
General 700,000 workers out cama within an
to date, in for In both,
many weeks. Coal was: stead of being years behind.
How essential to their jobs This time-ing between neces- events, would sill have to could the Australian Govern zily and policy is equally face another
problem. Tho evident in our
the jobs if the domestic ron TUC can influence, but it can coal was not available?..
ment provide cerns. Consider the Trades not control, its constikteni Union Congress.
Sikes, if sufficiently wide- bodies, either in the matter of spread, could bust the Bud- Wage cloima or restriolive get. How could a Govern- menit then guarantee the benefis of the Welfare Slate?
BELATED
proctices.
Most trado unions favour
HE General Council of the
trade unlon movement, has all other unions. Most unions presented to the Congress O favour the abolition of re- document dealing with wages, strictivo
TUC "centre" of the "restralat in wage claims"-for
practices-but not WE
profts and producilon. This those for which they are them- document
various selves responsible. propounds truths which have been rvi- cient to the Government for
NO PEPPED-UP HORSE WILL GET PAST THIS
ANALYST JEAN
Soon to move into a gleaming, new £10,000 laboratory.
NO EDGE TO THE SWORD
NEW YORK.
HOLLYWOOD's first film on
cun
the Palestine troubles, "Sword In the Desert," has bo-
its Broadway run, and there are few signs that it will start a new anti-British wave.
Indeed, Now York critics are
.
not much more kindly than their British colleagues.
Some dismissed it as the New York Herald Tribune critic did: "A good, nolay outlaw story, but very little more."
Alton Cook, of the New York World · Telegram, predicts that "ardent Zionists of Anglophiles may frown on this giddy treat- ment." And his predletlon was borne out by two of Broadway's best-knowny critics,
New York Times, rebuked pro- Bosley Crowther, crille for the ducer Bucker for portraying the British "as liff-necked eads."
+
And pro-Zionist Archer Win- sten wrote in the New York Post: A few, like the New York "great subject has been Journal American, took pains to brought low to the level of an point out that the British are action thriller treated fairly "as soldiers doing their duty,"
NANCY
GAME TODAY
...Ù,V,R, THOMITBON,
GIRL'S EYE
'Call me a 'dope," sh?" -
From HAROLD DALE: Sydney.
T will be a big day for Miss Jean Kimble when shel moves soon into a gleaming new £10,000 laboratory at Randwick-the Newmarket of Australia-a con- crete and steel reminder that the price of clean racing is eternal vigilance.
CHOICE
E can liave strikes; or we can have a Socialist Wel- Wo cannot, for fare State. any length of time, have both.
The effective cholce is be-
and tween a free soclety a de- new type of cutting machine grea of compulsion vastly which could be operated by greater
than anything the
Thus, recently the Imperial Tobacco Company introduced a
one man instead of three. If trade union mind is willing to this could be done on any contemplate. considerable scale throughout
industry our problems of man- Society can be free only if 1 will be sol- power and production would it is solvent.
vent only when all men, em- Le solved.
ployers and employed, are But what is the reactions of allowed to produce as muck the Tobacco Workers' Union? as they can and when both It is 10 demand a 40-hour in- feel that they will get, şome- stead of a 45-hour week. The thing by way of reward for union fears redundancy,
their extra effort. We have recently had a series of Sunday strikes bgalut The present drift is, towards
Chaos or. the lodging turns. Why? Because either
Whether pulsion State. redundancy
is fcbred.
Statc Now
is Com- when
Compulsion there is રી Bur-
or Fascist does not plus manpower-le, unem- munist
matter. Whichever ployment-redundancy
greatly to ta be feared. But when there is
of manpower,
to be feared
Miss Kimble's, scientific tests on swaba taken from every winning horse in Australian racing have been the shorloge means of warning a dozen owners and trainers off the Turf, and have broken up several racecourse gang betting rings.
dundancy is not but welcomed.
Com-.
tho
it is, it will mean the end of all those freedoms which maka life worth living.
If we want to avoid the Compulsion State, we had bet- If WE CUIL do with fewer ter begin to think in terms of
now hands the work
being
position our present
in the done, the more
thero world-not hands
In terms of what the work that it was 40 years ago.
The hunt fa for dope. And the sistant keeper of the Australian will be to da tests-proved two things; That Stud Book and a Bachelor of we ought to be doing, but are more doping of racehorses went Veterinary Science, was called in not.
on than anyone suspected, and— to organise that. Another 60 tests were made and six were post-
That doping is wiped out when tive. winners are known to be regu- · larly tested by official analysts.
Three years ago the stewards of the Australian Jockey Club noticed some old race resulta. Nobody knew what to do, no- body knew how to do it, and a strong minority of: prominent racing interests were against anything being done anyway.
The committee chairman, MF Allan G. Potter, got Professor J.D. Stewart, of Sydney Univer- slty, to devise aoine tests. Then they advertised in the "Men and Boys" column for someone to apply them.
To their surprise a woman turned up-jolly, thirty-ish Jean Kimble, B.Sc. She got the job against the competition of 30 She still feels pleased
men. about that.
Sald Jim to me: "That really woke us up. We had no idea that doping was so prevalent.
**The drugs used were caffeine and benzedrine-both stimulants. We test only for stimulants, beenuse If anyone wants to make a horse go slower there are plenty of other ways to do that."
Since
My next move was to order the testing of every winner. we started that we have not had 'positive,' nor even a ano suspected,' in nearly 250 cases.'
Twenty-eight-year-old Me- Fadden drove in a Jockey Club car laden with black tin boxes, locked and sealed for Kimble's tests.
"The seals?" she said.
Miss
B
~(London' Express Service)
SCIENTISTS SPLIT ON TELEPATHY
By CHAPMAN PINCHER: Newcastle-on-Tyno, Yannouncing that he believes in telepathy Pro- fessor Alister Clavering Hardy, Oxford University's leading biologist, startled British. Association scientists at their meeting here recently.
Ho said: "I am convinced that the communication of one mind with another by means other than the ordinary senses has been established.
"No one who examines the evidence of the scientific experi ments into telepathy with an un- binzed mind can reject it.
"Such revolutionary dis-
"We take the swabs, put them in glass covery should make us keep our jars and put the jars in the metal minds open to the possibility that boxes. These are locked and there may be so much more in sealed with lead. And the owner living things and their evolution and trainer are present the whole than our selonce had ledus 10 First swabs were token
in time.
expect." December 1947, and in four
"Wo cover the metropolitan
'We woke up'
months 60 swabs were taken. fracks. West Australia, South One showed the presence of Australia, and Tasmanla (ly drugs. The owner and trainer their samples to me."
were warned off.
But swabs were not easily obtained. Jim McFadden, as-
`AfɑFADDEN TAKES A SWAS
from a, Randwick winner.
Snoop Coup
HEY---NO FREE" 'SNOOPING --- SCRAM
CATER
Something more has happened, tea. The trainers have turned from hertility to secking Miss
Kimblo's advice.
!
First Time
Professor Hardy warned his fellow scientists that by Ignoring the existence of telepathy they were making themselves intcl- lectually dishonest..
"When it is pointed out to us, we ray it cannot be there because our doctrines say it la impos- sible," he said.
Jim McFadden sald of one of the samples he had brought "The trainer of Horse 17 says he thinks it is suffering from kidney
This the first time theso troubic. Would you tell him what experiments have been endorsed
Not all the samples are in gloss bottles. One trainer was caught feeding his horse will a largo lump of white suhelunce. This was sent to Misa Kimble,
sor.
BIOLOGIST HARDY
"? am convinced.
He told me he was not refer
you find out about it from these by a man of such International it hard to get jobs if we did no,
one of then said. Four others. tests?"
pute as Professor Hardy..
coult not necept the evidence on. Its announcement started a
selenic grounds. "Yes," Enld Miss Kimble. "I'll controversy which continued in
the Three agreed with profes do what I can.”
hotel lounges long after the lee túre rooms were empty.
Quizzing 20 scientists here, 1: found that seven shunned the ring to though-transference acts. evidence for telepathy, Said like those of the Piddingtons. He. one: "It would injure us pro evidence that anybody can frans
here is no selenite. fessionally to get mixed up with mut the messages to order. black magic
stuff
"They seem to be sent out and Six, mostly young researchers, received, unconsciously. But it were impressed by the evidence does seem that some poople are..
With his reputation estab
more-sensitive than others. ¿ at. lished. Professor Hardy con
receiving th afford the luxury of Urikering: with telepathy, but wo might find
"Just clay," she said, "or dinary white clay." He was giving it to the horse because he thought it would calm is stomach."
-{London Express Seroics)
By Ernie Bushmiller
ادمی
---[London Kiprase "Terolce)
JUST
MOTO
ANNOY
HIM
bif
INSECT SHEA
WITH DOT
SURE KIL
When there's bir Ineedn't use my fist!
SDIEAGTHES NAP KANG COMMONNA an
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