Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1940 — Page 5
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES °
CAMACHO FARIN | ® LEAD IN MEXICO
WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1940
DEFENSE TRAINING | Famous Fier er "WELL UNDER WAY _
Inducements Made to 280,000 Young Men Just Received Into CCC.
By RUTH FINNEY
Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, July 10.—A defense-industry training > program potentially able to train a million and a half persons | has moved forward quietly in the past month under existing! agencies of Government and with funds already available. oF ; 3 . . . wo 1'e SS veues. takes > Students are being enrolled now for vocational training | Dec. 1 I JUir tor lice to be given in the public schools during the balance of July | jf &¥ 3 | The Permanent Committee of : "op . : | 3 | Congress denounced Gen. Almazan and August. Fifty thousand of the trainees will be taken| : las a conspirator and “slayer of - ' 3 . . y . bud | 3 ; | wr A . » from WPA rolls and will be paid WPA wages while acquiring | JS | women and children. ! 4 \ 1 . a 3 The statement said Almazan knew mechanical skills. A hundred thousand will be taken either | the people did not support him out-
from unemployed workers en- * » % | Side of Mexico City and he there- : . > : iF | fore concentrated all his forces in rolled with the state employ- STATE COLLEGE E ers who have jobs but want HN \ to improve their skill. HEADS APPROVE ra
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A ‘Unofficial Returns Give Him 3,108,200 Votes and Almazan 943,500.
MEXICO CITY, July 10 (U. P.. | —Latest unofficial returns in Sun{day's presidential election today | gave Avila Camacho, Government | Party candidate, 3,108,200 votes as | against 943,500 for Gen. Juan Almazan, Independent. It is believed {the final official totals will not vary | more than 100,000 from these. | The winner will be announced of- | ficially Sept. 1, when the new Con-
| the capital and “organized impresment services or from workThe monev for these courses, $17.-
| sive tactics and street clashes—if | women and children fell so much 281,430, is coming partly from WPA funds and partiv from funds of
the better.” Election riots Sunday took 48 Office of Education The 280,000 young men just en-
lives and 400 were wounded, most of them in Mexico City. rolled in CCC camps are being of (ered mechanical courses
HEAD OF PACKARD GOES TO CAPITAL after working The courses
DETROIT, July 10 (U P) President M. M. Gilman of Packard available as to manyv have elected to take on this extra work.
Over 1,000 Dresses to Choose
the
[, U. and Purdue Presidents Indorse Principles of Compulsory Bill.
special hours and no
" + . . . " how Maj. James H. Doolittle , . , "It is expedient to hecome prepared, Motor Car Co. Was en rounte to
WASHINGTON, July 10 (U.P) \ : Cornelius Bull, general counsel of | Mamunpion soday 0 opie with the American Veterans’ Association, Oo C ) t ; on told the "Senate Military Affairs / - ane a S ears | Issues which blocked acceptance by Committee today that a system of | Packard directors of a contract for selective compulsory military train- | Sons of 9000 Rolls Royce airplane engines.
Training Extended
The NYA, which has been giving shop, metal and construction work
for several vears, has increased its training facilities in these lines. Less than half of its enrollees have been taking that might be called defense courses. The figure is being increased, though NYA has not undertaken the program ol training 450,000 young people that was planned es In addition,
courses
arlier Sidney Hillman, in charge of labor training for the NaDefense Advisory Commission, has planned an extensive ororam for training workers in the maustries themselves This program for teachers from trade and technical schools to instruct workers alread) employed and new ones that may he taken on The employment with 3,300,000 persons registered as wantIg jobs skills of all registrants numbers
kinas of work
tional
loans of
Calls
service
1s classiiyving the
segregating by states
the available for various
Reeves Co-ordinater Finally apprenticeship committee of Department 1s at work opening up apprenticeship scale than essential
the the Labo opportunities on a large: before, In Iaustries te the defense progran Fiovd W. Reeves, 1 Chicago and the Owen D. Young Youth Committee, 1s In co-ordinating the training facilities. Dr. Will W. Alexander, former Farm Security Administrator, has been appointed to supervise the training programs of the CCC, NYA vocational schools Meanwhile Congress waits to hear from Administration before starting serious work on a military
every niversity of director of American charge of
proiessor
PN(
the
ing is “indispensable for the safety |
of the nation.” Mr. Bull appeared before the committee as it resumed hearings on the Burke-Wadsworth bill for compulsory military training of men of 21 to 45 “We do not have the men now to wield the arms we are now building,” he said. “Let's have real soldiers, not just men in uniforms.” He told the committee that “you can't’ make soldiers overnight and he added that “tanks, planes and various mechanized forces are only part of the picture.” Long Range Plan Sought George F. Zook American council on education, testified that a training system should be evaluated only in the light of the present emergency He said that congress approves compulsory training he the system should apply to men over 21 years of age In order to protect the educational svsiem In event the svstem becomes necessary for the 18 to 20 age group, Mr. Zook said the council advocates a definite plan ta preserve the future welfare of vouth President Walter Hullihan of Delaware State College testified In a similar vein. He asserted that any system created probably would “re-
lei
f
for many years
Indiana Educators Approve
A statement by the presidents of seven Midwest universities indorsing the bill's principles was read to the committee by President Arthur C. Willard of the University of Illinois at a brief executive session. The statement declared that ade-
president of the
main with us a long time—perhaps
Away for U.S.
, Doolittle Says
It will be three vears before American industry will b® tooled to built 50.000 fighting planes a year, believes Ma). James H. Doolittle, the famed Army flier who has just settled indefinitely in Indianapolis as Army Air Corps representative for the Allison plant
Internationally known as a speed flier and test pilot, Maj
Doolittle
was called to the colors as a specialist by the War Department July 1
Now 44, Maj. Doolittle , . . who also is a doctor of science . came here Sunday from St. Louis, where for 10 vears he was in charge of aviation for the Shell Oil Co. Maj. Doolittle is square-jawed, short and stocky, with keen black eves and a receding hairline. He is earnest, serious and forthright, ‘Prepare Quickly’ Friendly and responsive, he likes t» emphasize points with a few wellchosen invectives, the trademark of the Army flving clan. “It's a question will have the time,” said the flier ‘It is expedient for us to become prepared as quickly as possible.” Compared to belligerent powers, our air defense is “wholly in adequate,” he said, but added that our aviation equipment as “units compared with any in the world.” “Our pilots are better trained “than European warbirds, he declared. The U. S. pilots, however, do lack the valuable combat training that ting.
whether we
nist JUST
Deficiency in Numbers “Our big deficiency in air defense is numbers—both planes and pilots,” Maj. Doolittle said. Asked how many planes and pilots the United States should have to make the country tack, he said simply:
“More than those possessed by any |
potential enemy.”
a fashion and social center.
- BR - rn
first in less He also
“blind”
to span the continent than half a day (1931). made the first complete flight in 1929
JAPAN'S VENICE FLOODED
TOKYO, July 10 (U, P.).—A Jap- | anese news agency correspondent at Osaka, the "Venice of Japan” on the island of Hondo. reported that a heavy rainfall, lasting from late vesterday until dawn today, inundated 73,000 houses to a depth of 26 inches. The railroad station was also flooded. The city has many arsenals, steel and glass mills and is
It was presumed that Packard directors would not approve the contract until a definite stand was taken by the Treasury Department on amortization for new equipment and buildings Another point was believed to be the question of final payment. Inasmuch as 6000 of the engines are destined for Great Britain, speculation arose as to who should pay in |event Britain is defeated. A definite jstand by the Government on the profit percentage in defense contracts was believed to be another | point.
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Of the Allison liouid-cooled engine, | = As Ma). Doolittle said, “it gives prom- | 8 A. M. ise of being one of the finest air- As Late as scale now contemplated required a plane engines in the world.” i Late system of selective compulsory mili- Maj. Doolittle was the first man 6:30 P. M.
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NAVY KEEPS SECRET WILLIAMS LETTERS
U'tmes Special WASHINGTON. July 10.Navy Department will not make public the correspondence which preceded and followed the resignation of Al Williams as a major In the Marine Corps Reserve, a spokesman. said toda The statement of Department's position was issued ‘Maj. Williams submitted his resijgnation with the statement that he could best’ serve his country In a non-military capacity It was cepted with but announcement been deferred until the formal notice of acceptance could be received by Mr Such letters of resignation are never made public by the Navy Department. They are considered part Salgon reports received here today of the personal records of officers. aeniea reports published abroad that “The Navy Department has no ob- Bao Dai, Emperor of Annam, had of resignation, been assassinated
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