Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1942 — Page 19

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FRIDAY, JAN. 30, 1942 | ‘THE BLOODY Industry Must ‘Go Out After Orders, UNDOINS' OF | Says Man Who Will Assign War Jobs

This is the first of a series of articles on men who have come

~ SECOND SECTION

The War and You

EQUITY SOUGHT FOR ALL UNDER

Hoosier Vagabond By Ernie Pyle

I can sense, as the weeks wear on, a slowly growing doubt and intolerance of all Japanese, Americanborn or not.

Five Hours in the Rain

SEATTLE, Jan. 30.—Recently I visited a place where a big merchant liner is being refitted as an armed transport. It was a ship I had seen before the

War. It takes about six months to turn a liner into a

fighting-type transport, and costs almost as much as the ship did originally. The man who showed me over this one said, “Do you know what the yardstick is by which they figure out the number of troops to put on a transport in this war?” I said I had no idea. It has been a long time since I've had an idea on anything. “Well,” he said, “they judge it

a

WHILE WE'RE ON the subject of foreign-descended Americans, I'm reminded of nosing around recently in the grape-growing country a few miles north of San Francisco. This lovely, gentle country of rolling hills and Old World wineries is heavily Italian, German and French. I wondered, as I came through, how those of Axis descent were being treated these days. Well, so far, everything seems to be fine. Most of the vintners are several generations removed from the old country, and like most of California's Japanese, they know only America.

That

Copyright, 1942, by The Indianapolis Times an

A JAP RAIDER

Hawk-Eyed Pilot From Devonshire Gets a

Bomber Over Burma. By LELAND STOWE

The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

to the .top of the heap in the OPM shake-up.

By JOHN W. LOVE Yimes Special Writer WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.—The operating heads of the War Production Board's new setup are mostly business executives who came up from engineering jobs in industry. If there's to be a managerial revolution it might be starting here and now.

NEW PRICE BILL

Main Street te Ge! Break

With Park Avenue in

Rationing Program. WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (U. P.) =

I heard one cute story that concerns an Italian near Santa Rosa, Cal. In times like these it wouldn't be pulied on anybody who wasnt pretty well thought of. It seems this Italian registered for civil defense. A few nights later his phone rang and he was ordered to proceed at once to a certain bridge and stand guard over it. So off he drove, at 11 o'clock at night, to this bridge, which was about 12 miles from his home. He got there and took up his post, walking up and down in a pouring rain. He walked up and down for four or five hours; nobody ever came past, he never saw a soul, none of his “superiors” came to check on him. And gradually it dawned on him that maybe he 2s was being ribbed. So just before daylight he drove TOF pore 8 Ans igre oe 8 ‘he home, and early next morning he made a few dis-| 720 8! ii a as it TE was just 4 lie Joke Sécmed IES he Devenshire chap 00 > : poking afound up there in his Hur-| : ricane did not have more than one chance in a thousand.

RANGOON, Jan. 27.—(Delayed). —With the swelling moon we expected them back early but we did not expect what a corporal from England's west coast afterwards labeled, “the bloody undoin’s of one of the Jap bombers.” Even with the moon two-thirds expanded and the tropical clouds high and transparently thin, it's long odds hunting for a night fighter—well, it would be except that these Hurricane pilots have been night-hawking over Great Britain

either by the number of men that can get on deck at one time—they won't carry more than can all get on deck at once— or they judge 1t by the amount of toilet facilities they can find room for. Whichever one is reached first, that's the number of men theyll carry.”

The Growing Intolerance

A FRIEND OF MINE in Tacoma has had for several vears a Japanese maid, American-born. They are on very friendly terms. This friend was telling me that when the Pearl Harbor news started goming over the radio that Sunday, the maid just disappeared. They didnt see her for three days, until my friend finally drove to her house and coaxed her back “What was the matter with her?” I asked “She was afraid we were going to torture her for Pearl Harbor,” he said.

Leon Henderson, under the price control bill now awaiting President Roosevelt's signature, is going to try to assure the man on Main Street as good a chance as the Park Avenue millionaire to buy such things as gasoline, food, dishes and other household goods. While prices alone cannot solve equitable distribution problems, Mr, Henderson's associates said today, the price administrator, neverthes less, feels that through the imposie tion of price ceilings he can make sure that the millionaire has no unfair advantage in buying the sort of things that everyone nore mally buys. But if that fails to bring about a share-and-share-alike distribution of ordinary commodities, Mr. Hen= derson still has an ace card—the rationing of such commodities to guarantee that no one person will be entitled to any more than ane other person,

Two Main Objectives

Mr. Henderson is pictured by his associates, however, as hoping that he will have to invoke rationing as

It is keynote, for the time being: “No more debating societies.” One of the new offices created by Donald M. Nelson on assuming control of the giant procurement and production job is the division of industry operations. It is headed by another Chicago man, James S. Knowlson—one who, like Mr. Nelson, had his university work in engineering and then went into manufacturing. Also like Mr. Nelson, he believes in committees for advice, but in direct, personal responsibility for action. An old friend of Mr. Nelson's, Mr. Knowlson was called to Washington in September when Nelson took over the rapidly congesting priorities agency and undertook to install there an allocations system for the movement of materials to war industry. From that task. he recently moved up to take charge of the office whose operations will touch thousands of manufacturing concerns all over the country. It will

He took it all right,

Japs Feel for Port We were with some of the R. A..F, bomber boys—those who did not happen to be over Bangkok at that very moment. Half an hour earlier we had heard the first two Jap bombers feeling for their airport several miles away had seen the grass fires which their clumps had

Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum

affixing a noose on the eng, he managed to snare the snake. And then he returned it to the sideshow on Illinois St. from which it had escaped.

FEDERAL FOOD STAMP investigators, working under cover the last couple of weeks, have found numerous instances of violations by some of the grocers handling the stamps.

Most of the irregularities, as we get it, have been of a minor nature, such as grocers accepting the food stamps for kerosene, tobacco and other items not on the approved list. However, some of the other cases have been more serious, such as giving reliefers liquor for their stamps. And in at least one instance, a grocer is reported to have bought, at a sizable discount, a book of relief stamps from an investigator purporting to be a relief client. Several other forms of chiseling by both grocers and reliefers have been found. In the minor cases, the grocers may be let off with a warning. Some. however. mayv be removed from the list and their cases submitted to the Federal Grand Jury. Snakes Alive!! SEVERAL GIRLS walked out the back door of the Kresge 5 gnd 10 the other day and. to their surprise and consternation (that's putting it mildly), they saw lying there, right in the middle of Court St., a real for sure, live rattlesnake of the Texas diamond back variety. The girls screamed and broke all records getting away. Ray Schuenmeyer, who works in L. S. Ayres shipping department, heard the commotion and investigated. When he saw the snake, Ray put into practice some of the tricks he had learned in. the tropics while serving in Panama with the Army. Straightening out a metal coat hanger and

Washington

WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 —Fortunately both the United States and the British are busy now trying to dispel the earlier impression that they regard the war in the Pacific as a secondary operation. An unhappy belief was spreading that the Pacific area was to be allowed to worry along as best it could while the main effort was thrown against Hitler. Concern was felt deeply in some quarters here that both Roosevelt and Churchill were slipping into the idea that it did not matter how far Japan advanced if Germany could be crushed first because the map up job then would be easy. The public caught that idea largely from a speech by Secretary of Navy Frank Knox, who =aid just after the Roosevelt-Churchill meeting something to the effect that Hitler was the chief enemy.

Eights and Nines

SOME WAY OR OTHER the street numbers on N. Emerson Ave. are all mixed up. South of Ninth St., on Emerson, the houses are numbered in the 700 series. From Ninth St. to St. Joe is the 800 block. The 900 block is from St. Joe to 10th St. The City Engineer's ofite lays tne blame on a street name + their silhouettes. change a few years ago. It's all pretty confusing. . . | Now we stood alongside the somBy the way, the City Engineering Department has , ... headed kokobin trees, staring. been hit pretty hard by employee desertions. They! The buzzing Hurricane still rehas) Eierienced Salam yg} all but one of the mained invisible. Then a Blenorigina are gone—to tter jobs. None has gone | im gunner, a wiry, little fellow, to the Army. They've recruited a few more drafts- chirped: men, and now theyre losing two of the recruits. “There's something else. One, who has been getting $1700 a year, goes to a| it's a twin.” ig job. A couple of senior field aides are leaving] The bomber hoys can always be or the new powder plant near Terre Haute. trusted to recognize a bimotored

h ] Ta hum. Yes, some more Japs were The Big Bird coming in. Would the Hurricane’s WHEN YOU ORDER chicken at a restaurant, you pilot be able to make them out don't always get cnicken. Some of our better res-| this time? : taurants and club dining rooms fill chicken orders Couldn't See a Thing with turkey. The reason: There's more meat and So listened to the double less waste on them. Also, there's more white meat. | h ih a, i i Sr o th Yum, yum. . . , One of our local advertising men is| UMS Som. ng STag a an : telling about a bit of tough luck. It was raining and | other waspish buzz rioving four he got out the car to take his son to school. About | fed Straits os bh —e three blocks from the school the car ran out of gas.| couldn't see a thing en! : > The boy had to walk on to school in the rain and ™°°R sed he IRISH puny eyes the father had to walk several blocks to a filling | 11 the ey ig Seve ue station. He walked back, poured a can of gasoline | Bye a apen ng wy o re into the gas tank. and then discovered he'd put the fvoy With it. AWILAY tough, hun gas in the wrong car. XZ@S$Ib&! up there, even for a night

started burn out harmlessly. 3 .The Japs had got far off from their target but despite the fact that they were less than a mile from us, and regardless of the bright moonlight, we could not pick

Wait—

ing fighter veteran of the Battle of

Britain. : Buzz, buzz to the north of us— | buzz, buzz, bukz, faster and sharper By Raymond Clapper well to the east of us. Then | we were all yelling at once, “he’s on ‘her. There she is. Hurray! Blimey! Tt takes six weeks to get supplies to the Far East| This time gets her! Did you see") and not an hour is to be lost. | A long chain of red lights was Even more tragic than all of this is the plight of shooting diagonally into the) our own troops in the Philippines. Gen. MacArthur| ight. , is conducting a delaying action which is winning the] Twin and single buzzes were all praise of military men as a work of genius. If there mixed up now but we still could| were anything we could do for him that is not being| not see the planes which were batdone. it would be criminal. | tling desperately in the void. Now the ‘question is whether to allow the rest of Almost in a snap of the fingers, the southwest Pacific to go. Evidently the decision the stabbing dashes vanished leavhas already been made that everything possible must ing a darker blur against the] be done to hold it. Some assistance seems already clouds. Everyone was babbling. to have arrived. At least the dispatches from the Had the Hurricane lost her? Jens Suggest that. But it is not enough, as is clear | Red Dashes Once More rom the frantic appeals of the authorities in Aus-| Once more that slender, stabbing

habe, chain of red dashes. But this time > 7s Fn nals it slashes diagonally earthward Some Vital Factors Involved ro SINGAPORE'S TEST IS approaching, and if it flash of lightning. Then a single falls the Japanese position will be immeasureably| White light breaks out far below strengthened. Beyond all that is the future of west-| the searing javelin of red dashes. ern civilization in that enormous area. The Oriental Then we are all yelling madly, “he’s

up

| Mr.

even determine the fate of many

of them. 2 ” 2

Power Like St. Peter’s

FOR MR. KNOWLSON, like St. Peter, has the power to loose and to bind. It is the work of his organization to direct the rationing of materials on the industrial end, matching Leon Henderson's on the civilian end: to give new shape to the revised program for aid to small industries, to direct the conversion of civilian industry to war production, and to oversee the various industry branches such as Ernest KanzJer’s automotive committee in Detroit, and some 50 or 60 separate industry committees yet to be formed. Several of these functions have already been developed, for instance the work of Floyd Odlum's Defense Contract Service which is about to be merged into the Knowlson division. Other sections of the manybranched WPB will decide what materials are available to indus{ry and what production policies will be followed, but Mr. Knowlson's will have some of the least popular jobs. By Mr. Nelson's orders this week, Mr. Knowlson now has all the power Mr. Nelson has to take over tools and other property needed for the war effort. His, in short, is the assignment of working industry the rest of the way

| into the war.

= ” » Industry Must Help IN THE CONVERSION of civilian: industry to war production Knowlson looks for most manufacturers to continue mak-

James S.

Knowlson

ing the first moves. Theirs is still the initiative, he says. Washington offices cannot thumb through a register of manufacturers and see who's able to make what,

“Manufacturers are not stupid, and most of them know they have to go after orders in war just as they do in peace,” he said.

“They know they can't get materials in the regular way, and can't expect to supply their old customers as they have been doing. But over here on this side is a great big new customer with first class credit, who knows what he wants, is ready and eager to buy, but doesn’t know everywhere he can buy. “It is still industry's duty to keep trying to get these orders, and then these offices can help industry it the conversion problems.” . 2 2 ”

Tough and Hard-Hitting?

QUITE A BODY of information will soon be available on how to convert, and how small industries can help themselves in conversions, but the office is still being put together up here, “Keep your eye on the Kanzler branch in the automotive industry,” Mr. Knowlsen went on. “The directions it takes will be the guide to much of the development, not only in the new industry branches but in industry itself. Perhaps the Kanzler committee will turn out to be the Detroit committee. Perhaps the decentralization of management

will be by region or area rather than by industry.” They say of Mr. Knowlson that he is tough, or anyway toughminded, and hard-hitting. But if that is true he is also one of the most approachable of men, cordial in conversation. with a nervous wink which adds to the air of affability. y on ”

He's No ‘Superman’

HIS MANNER shows no suggestion of the great powers he possesses, but he is aware of the responsibility: “The job is tremendous, but when Mr. Nelson says we've not only got to do it, but that we're going to do it, we know he’s right both ways.

A bit difident with newspapermen, he doesn't want them to give him any of the superman buildup, a process which isn’t always the safest thing in Washington these days anyway. In Chicago he lived the life of the successful manufacturer, voted the Republican ticket, had little patience (he once wrote) “with the siren voices of panacea peddlers,” and rode the Burlington to his home in. pleasant Hinsdale. He was born in Chicago in 1883, was graduated in electrical engineering at Cornell University, was with General Electric a few years and then returned to Chicago. There. he became president of the Stewart-Warner Corp. and was for & time president of the Radio Manufacturers Association. Last autumn hn was chairman of the Chicago Community Chest.

Roosevelt Signs Price Control Measure;

Protests 110 Per Cent of Parity Farm Rise

WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (U. P).) —President Roosevelt today signed is a definite violation of an objective | valuable tool—along = with He described sought by the Administration and

the price control bill.

This provision, the President said,

out. have coarser rayon and cotton or go without,

a last resort, or in such cases where acute shortages exist. automobiles already are being rae tioned, and sugar soon will be.

Tires and

The objectives of the price cone

trol bill and Mr, Henderson's ade ministration of two-fold—to keep prices generally at pre-war levels and in that mane ner fo prevent uncontrolled inflae tion, and to assist equitable dise tribution. ;

its provisions are °

Army Needs Doom Silk Stockings

WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (U. P).

—No war can change the American woman's heritage of shapely legs, but it can—and very soon will— strip them of a goodly part of their glamour.

Silk stockings are on the way American women soon will to clothe their legs with

Army parachutes have first call

on Nylon, and it is. generally cone ceded that this beauty must give way to the call of necessity.

is a case where

Even rayon is not going to be

too plentiful, since army parachute cords, army clothing, men’s civilian clothing, and even tire fabric must all be supplied. But WPB has given assurance that women can get all the rayon stockings they want—if they want them.

Rationing of Cars Put Off to Feb. 9

The rationing of the nation’s

stocks of new automobiles, frozen since: Jan. 1, until Feb. 9, James D. Strickland, State nounced today.

has been postponed Ration administrator, an-

State Administrators have been

informed that the postponement was ordered to permit better ore ganization of the rationing system and the completion of surveys of new car stocks.

Mr. Strickland also disclosed that

| He described the bill as another NO eXtra personnel will be added

taxes, 10 County ration boards to handle savings and rationing—to control DEW cars as well as tires.

inflation.

The President said he thought the bill had a good framework because it vested authority in a single administrator and set forth workable procedures for price control.

In its present form the act. di|récts the price administrator to attempt to keep non-agricultural prices in the same general relationship as prevailed from Oct. 1 to 15, 1941, and to keep rents in defense | housing areas at approximately the|

Now Secretary Knox says he was misunderstood. He says we will fight everywhere, as this is all one war. Churchill, in defending himself to Commons, says now that the Pacific war is not a secondary operation. Mr. Roosevelt says we are sending all possibie help there. If it were not for red tape here we probably could send more, but that is something else.

Could We Be Forgiven?

HERE IS A MOST difficult matter of balance. If while crushing Japan we allowed Hitler to win. the victory in the Pacific would be a holiow one. Neither

it as a-bill worth having but sharply the agricultural population of the criticized provisions which permit country for more than eight years. farm prices to rise to 110 per cent He added that it constitutes a diof parity. rect threat to the cost of living beThe President said that if opera- cause parity is not a fixed amount, tions of the bill prove such a step but only a relationship .of the agnecessary, he may ask Congress to ricultural cost of living to the noncorrect certain gaps in the bill, par- agricultural cost of living. ticularly the agriculture provisions. | He pointed out that the AdminisThe President gave his views on tration "had sought to bring farm The bomber boys are dancing and (he measure at a press conference prices up to an average of 100 per

whacking each others backs. For the| which Price Control Administrator cent parity. The 110 per cent pro-

tidal wave threatens to wipe out all vestige of Chris- 80t her! He's got her! Then the tian civilization, including that of Australia. There thin red javelin is gone and it are factors in this one does not like to dwell upon|Seems that nething is happening. because of their awful implications. | Then, well under the darkened

Even ‘the later crushing of Japan on her own I re un gre island might not make it possibie to undo the dam-| go me suddenly lightens the sky. It age that would result from temporary victory Over, svers momentarily, then plunges the United Nations | > ions now throughout the southwest straight down. The horizon is il<

Once lost, it might be gone forever, regardless of [UHRIGSIEY un Ong Mugs fash:

the ultimate fate of Japan herself. for Japan is a nation of some 75 million 1 0 ; : on peuple SIMONE WETRYS ® | first time in Burma, perhaps the ;e,n Henderson attended. vision in the price control bill ex-

Henderson Warns

Tire Bootleggers

WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (U. P), —Price Administrator Leon Hendere son today moved to combat tire bootlegging with a warning that violators of tire rationing regulae tions face possible maximum penale ties of $10,000 fine and 10 years ime prisonment. Mr. Henderson's office

said it

could we allow Japan to overrun the entire southwest Pacific while we were defeating Hitler. Indeed if Japan should make contact with Hitler through the Indian Ocean and the Miadle East, the United Nations might find it impossible to win the war. Could we ever be forgiven if we stood idly by while the people of Australia were invaded and captured br the Japanese? If we allow the Dutch East Indies to fall, Australia will have to be supplied with oil from our own Pacific Coast or from the Persian fields.

My Day

WASHINGTON, Thursday —I had a snowy day vesterday and skidded around the Long Island roads, so that I really had some moments of apprehension when my daughter-in-law, Ethel, said: “Perhaps you will be snowed in and we can keep you here.” However, I reached my departing train in ampie time and was on time for my train connecticn in New York Ciiy and in Philadelphia. Mr. Ellis Gimbel has given two awards this year, one to go to a Philadelphia woman, and one to be awarded on a national scope. In Philadelphia, they felt that Mrs. William Clothier had done an outstanding job for the community for more than 20 years. as a leader in civic and charitable undertakings, overseas and in this country. She certainly richly deserves the honor. Though she accepted it modestly, stating she was but a symbol of those who served on the state defense council, it is a well known fact that those

who are symbels have much to do with creating the

things they symbolize. The second award is the national award and is, as a rule, given to sn individual, a woman who has stood out nationally in some way. But this year it was given to a family, an outstanding American .

jena first time in the Far Eastern war! Beside sucl i ions. ti aw | Arse 1 the A SEN, Sensiqstations, oe mere jest of ANE R. A. F. night fighter has shot

materials which are concentrated in the southwest Pacific would be trivial, even though that area pro- G00 2 Jap bomber. vides our only adequate sources of certain primary Japs Pay Big Price essentials such as rubber and tin. It is not merely, The Japs already are paying a that wealth and materials may fall into Japanese colossal price for their daylight control completely. but that the Christian civiliza-| raiding here. Now at last they will tion is under threat of being driven from that part, have to pay for night raids. That of the world. hawk-eyed Devonshire pilot has drawn the first blood for the Allfes in night air battle. | The corporal from the west coast | By Eleanor Roosevelt of England was simply beaming | when we came up. ! “Did you see 'im get that Jap? family doing a job for the nation’s defense. By good | Marvelous show! That will teach luck, the family's name is Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip| 'em. When ’e dropped ‘is flare that Jones and their four children. was 'is bloody undoin’s.” So. even in their names they typify the everyday! It seemed that the corporal was families all over this country, who in greater and| Jolly well right.

lesser degree are doing the same kind of job for the victory of our nation in this war. 15 WAYNE MEN END | RED CROSS COURSE

I hope that their recognition will give a lift to many other families in this country, who, reading about them, will think: “Why, there we stand ourselves, and we are being recognized as essential to Fiteen Wayne Township men who the winning of this war.” Serve as guards in local industry or It is not just in their names that the Joneses re-| nC 8re members of the volunteer semble other people. fire department were graduated in To begin with, they are a farm family. ine Sayanese Vig Cr ou The father runs a dairy farm, the mother has a Shao t ving Bh Davie brought up four children and runs a big house. Still The men completed the standard course of 36 hours instruction and {the advanced course of 18 hours.

she had time to take part in the activities in her eoEmunIY and is a member of the defense council. e older son is a private in the Army, the two i & girls and the younger brother are all actually doing Tot he Yh Ske A oo things which have a bearing on the war effort. | instructors. They are: . It seems to me that Mr. Gimbel has a grand idea | Kenneth S. Biggs, Jesse R. Cook. in honoring, through. the recognition of a family George O. Darnell, Ernest L. y group, the families all over the country who are Office Gaskins, Robert J. Hadley, making similar efforts. |Frank P. Harper, Cleo A. Hollers, This morning I talked with Dr. John Studebaker Alva J. Love, K. R. Paulsen. Oscar of the Office of Education, and with many people in! F. Wiseman, Marvin W. Wells, Gar

He said there was a real danger ceeds this objective, he said.

ceiling can be placed on

cent of parity.

in the provision whereby no price] agriculture products at less than 110 per

The President described powers

vested in the bill as the authority to deal with problems inherent in a and violators are subject to a max‘war situation.

HOLD EVERYTHING

his office, on the conception of the job we all must|rett Richard, William A. Smith and do together in civilian defense. : Ernest A. Stafford, 2

it so well I gave up writing the book!” ®

April 1, 1941, level.

He may license commodity dealers as a means of enforcing the act,

imum penalty of $5000 and two years’ imprisonment, as well as to civil suits for triple damages— whichever is larger. '

Four Maximum Ceilings

The: Government also is authorized, for a second violation, to use court procedure to revoke a violator’s license, thus putting him out of business. Mr. Henderson, however, could operate without the licensing system, if he found he did not need it. The bill contains four minimum ceilings below the highest of which it ' is specifically forbidden to fix farm prices—and then only with the prior approval of Secretary of Agriculture Claude R. Wickard. They are: 1. 110 per cent of parity. 2. The market price of Oct. 1, 1941. 3. The market price of Dec. 15, 1941. ’ 4. The average market price prevailing from 1919 to 1929.

NAZIS BOOST U-BOAT TOLL

BERLIN, Jan. 30 (Official Broad- | cast Recorded by the United Press in London)—The official news agency reported today a special | High Command communique that

| 13 more ships, making a total of 43

“I started out being a bum to get material for a book—but I liked had been sunk by U-boats off the

United States and Canadian eiste.

would: whom complaints have been made,

investigate dealers against

T—Complete

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE

1—What proportion of the total

estimated national income of the United States has President Roosevelt recommended for war expenditures in the 1942 fiscal year?

3—Who was the first United States

civilian Governor of the Philipe pines?

3—Do the inside or outside wheels

of an automobile tend to lift off the road when taking a curve at high speed?

4—“Westward Ho!” is a novel by

which author?

5—What is the name for the red

coloring matter in blood?

6—A sombrero is a kind of a hat,

a dancer, or a sporting event?

Shakespeare's line, “The course of true love never did run

8—How many time zones are in the

United States?

Answers

1—Fifty-six percent. 2—~William Howard Taft. 3—Inside wheels. 4—Charles Kingsley. 5-—~Hemoglobin. 6—Hat. 7—Smooth. 8—Four,