Syndicate of the smear By Bernie Asbel AL CAPONE, despite all the; smutty things said about i him, was an upstanding patriot I in the best contemporary tradi tions. Sure he was. Take, for ex ample, a public statement he once made on Communism. It went something like this: “All I did in my life I did to fight Communism from taking over America.” - He saw to it that one of his Chicago hench men was elect ed to a seat in the Congress of the United States. He spent his time and ener gy to elect fi,Te of the best lawmakers t at his money could buy to tne Illinois state legislature. Capone was vulnerable. He had a weak gut and couldn’t af ford to get kicked in it. He trained his statesmen well, so that they gathered in a protec tive ring cround him and cried “Red’every time a gangbusting law was up for passage. And so now, State Sen. Ro land ", Libonati, who used to shout “Kill the ur>p: with A1 Capone at White Sox Park in the '30s, sits in the Illinois Seditious Activities Commission. Rep. J. Parnell Thomas, Washington's ’Red” specialist, w'as scheduled to go on trial this ■week, charged with fraud in his Congressional payroll. He was vulnerable. He had a curse to cast from himself on to another. He sought his safety and securi ty, too, with the redbaiters and labor-haters. Senator Glen Taylor displays a clipping from a paper in Twin Falls, Idaho, his home state. The headline reads, “Council Defeats Tax on Slot Machines; Calls Proposal ‘Red’.” There’s the same twist again. But the same pattern moves into other fields. The hug bites fine church-going men, too. whose vulnerable spots have no connection with racketeering. For example when the Taft Hartley bill was up for a vote in Congress in 1947, thousands of militant union men piled into cars and descended on Wash ington in a great motorcade. But Philip Murray and William Green feared that kind of mass action. They preferred the method of high level “persua sion” with the White House, rather than the “irritating” in fluence of a lobby. So they privately requested Congress men to boycott the mass rally, calling their own unionists “Reds.” As speed-ups get speedier and pay-scales lag in steel and auto, the Murray-Reuther cry of “Communist” increases in un canny proportion. There is a vulnerability strangely : kin to that of Parnell Thomas. In a southern city where I covered the news, the CIO regional director greeted visi tors with a sticker on his door, 'Member, Chamber of Com merce.” For relaxation, he lunched frequently with the local chief of the FBI. This was a vulner able spot, but it gave the CIO man a community prestige which he enjoyed. A ■'■nail group of unions privately questioned these social habits and tied them up with ar inevitable laxness in union militancy. He found his pro tection in red-baiting. The smear is the same for the high-tvpe, refined elements as for the thugs. It is an uncomfortable alli ance, which some wish were not there. But the choice for those who squirm is to break the al liance by forming a new one with mass action of the people. But it begins to appear they would feel this even more de grading. Cartel book ducks the key issue—Political tie-ups Reviewed by Lew Brooks WHEN the cartel story is properly told, it startles even those who already know about them. This is not a start ling book. As a purely academic descrip tion of cartels, i he b..ok might serve. But car tels are neither B|MWh pure nor acade mic. They are highly political. If the cartelists themselves, recognizing popular resentment, had set out to “give leadership” down avenues leading nowhere, they could not have done a bet te job than these authors. The book’s failure begins on the cover: “Cartels or Competi tion.” This, to put it kindly, is naive. Competition in an era of monopoly capital inevitably leads to monopi’y exp; nsion. Fifty years of history should be proof enough of this even for the professor-authors. To continue to argue for a return o “competition” is like exhorting molten lava to flow bacl; i. .o the volcano. THE ILLINOIS js owned and published weekly by The Illinois Progressive Publishing Co Inc., 187 N. LaSalle St., Chi cago 1, 111. Phone: RAndolph 6-9270. METZ P. lOCHARD.-.Editor ROD HOLMGREN.Managing Editor JOSEPH PERSILY.-.General Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 year . .$_2.00 |Add $1 for Canada and Foreign) Entered as second class matter October 5. 1948 at the post office at Chicago, Illinois, Jndir the Aciof March 3, 1879. CARTELS OR COMPETITION? by George Stocking and Myron Watkins. Twentieth Century Fund. $4.00. After two world wars, brought on by the cartelists, the political nature of cartels should be apparent to the professors. They speak of "government controls.” So long as cartels control governments how can governments control cartels? These are things with which the book doef not deal. It reiter ates, rather, the "purism” of America. America must take the lead in controlling cartels. But who is today the leading cartel power—Liberia? Who re established the cartels in the Ruhr and Germany, against even the wishes of France and Britain — Finland? This is the core of the .iction of “American interests” which rots our whole foreign policy— the assumption that since what the American people want is right, therefore what our State Department does is right. There is an ocean of difference be tween what the American peo ple need and what the Ameri can monopolists who control our foreign policy want and get. Introduce bill to block mergers WASHINGTON (FP) — Sen ators Joseph C. O’Mahoney (D., Wy.) and Estes Kefauver (D., Tenn.) filed a bill this week to plug loopholes in the Clayton anti-trust act. Both are long time opponents of monopolistic mergers. By Peter Williams YOU didn’t hear it in Gov. Stevenson’s inaugural speech Monday, but the original script referred to one Dwight H. Green, of late unemployed, as "my distinguished predecessor.” After the speech was mimeo graphed, a top level huddle was called to reconsider. Payoff was Green’s reduction in the reading to merely "my predecessor.” At last reports, Green may become a man of distinction by switching to Calvert’s. —O— A contradictory report says the ex-Guv will heed the ad monition of Carl Sandburg at the inaugural ceremony. Sand burg held aloft a quote from Lincoln. He lengthily explained that this was the final sentence of a letter Lincoln wrote in 1862, at a dramatic point in the Civil War. The build-up built up., and 5,500 breaths were held till Sandburg broke it: “Let us be,” came the quote in a protracted Sandburgian drawl, “quite sober.” —O— BOOKING AGENTS PLEASE NOTE: You left a loophole when you refused to book Larry Adler and Paul Draper into Chicago as reprisal for their suppor* of the Progressive Party during election. They're walking through the loophole and on to the stage of the Civic Opera in a few weeks. Sponsor: Guess. Right. The Progressive Party. _n_ MORE UPCOMING: Dem chief Jake Arvey and Rep-pro bate Bunny East may get mild feelings of inadequacy when they hear who’s going to emcee Progressive Party’s Cabaret ’49 on Jan. 30. . . . People’s Songs hot to hold another Hoot—short for one of their variety shows and folk song jam sessions. Western Union making money while arrangements go on to bring in Betty Sanders from New York Feb. 19. . . . Lincoln Day (Feb. 12) dinner-dance skedded by 10th Ward P.P. for St. George’s Hall, 96th and Ewing. —O— Gil Tedder, seen around with Actors for Wallace, and Jack Barthel, hitting the racks with their newest published song, “I Can't Find a Word.” Bob Morris, WJJD vocalist, introducing it Friday (15th), 11:30 a m. By Rod Holmgren DESPITE the optiriiistic notes struck by President Truman’s messages last week, we stick to our warning that growing un employment — ana oiner aanger signals — snow the time left before the Big Bump is shorter than has been figured. From Dayton, O., comes word a city work relief program has been set up for the first time since before the war. It’s to take care of persons made jobless by factory and construc tion layoffs. They expect the program to be doubled this month! * * * LABOR must beware attempted use of layoff reports to fight off iourth round wage hikes. One New York Times financial editor says “word has been passed along that it would be a good thing for chambers of commerce and others to publicize such infor mation.” Fact is, of course, layoffs have not been reflected by cuts in prices paid by the workers still on the job. Living costs are still at postwar peak. In most cases, Layoff has a twin brother — Speedup, which means the guy still in the shop is turning out even more labor—and profiu— for the boss. NEW answer to phony argument that wage hikes mean price hikes comes from V. L. Bassie, Economic and Business Re search director at the University of Illinois. Speaking on the Fourth Round at Illinois Bankers Association confab, Bassie said: “There is a widespread acceptance of the idea that wage in creases are automatically reflected in higher prices which elimi nate any gain to their recipients. The fact is that an inflationary boom cannot sustain itself in this way. Part of the increased in come (from higher prices) leaks out into taxes, savings, retained profits and business reserves. They amount at present to perhaps ! 40 percent of the increment.’’ WORTH noting that Governor Stevenson’s choice for new Illinois mine director is a man a_jment man, James Starks, of Peabody Coal Co., despite re peated labor demands that a union leader be namea to the post. My candidate for assistant di rector is Driscoll Scanlan, a real friend of Illinois miners, who was “just too damned honest” for the Green administration. St. Louis Post Dispatch also plugging Scanlan, who’s a really liberal guy, by the way. REMEMBER Phil Murray’s snide comments on the “small size” of left-wing unions at the Portland convention? Previously it had been the practice not to publish membership figures on CIO unions. But since Murray raised it, here are some facts (based on U. S. Department of Labor figures): Of 197 national and international unions in the nation — 39 of them CIO, 4*" had fewer than 5,COO members. SO had from 5,000 to 25,000 29 had from 25,000 to 50,000 35 had from 50,000 to 100,000 31 had from 100,000 to 500,000 6 had 500,000 or more CIO Farm Equipment Workers union is about 11th in size among CIO unions, and is in the third highest group. * * * SUPREME Court’s ruling which and its closed shop prohibition, says it’s okay for states to that will automatically mean the ban closed shop sharpens ur- federal government has “taken gency of Taft-Hartley repeal, over” an area of jurisdiction, Labor lawyers believe decision which automatically cancels out makes it possible for states to state laws on the subject, enact laws barring not only the Labor’s position would be fur closed shop, but all forms of ther strengthened by a section union security, including union specifically legalizing union sec shop and maintenance of mem- urity contracts, in re-enacted bership. Wagner Act which fills the If Congress now repeals TH vacuum caused by TH repeal. ?KoTrt5,?WCSS * WAGES 1945 1948 □ sot*a | lUCtEMt ©* M - * ' as. t>cPT <* CCMMt«K{ THIS CHART shows how profits and prices have skyrocketed above !wages since the end of World War II. It is based on official figures 'recorded since the abolition of the excess profits tax and price ■controls.