Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1942 — Page 18

PAPER PLAYS UP At Peer! Harber WILLKIE, WNUTT

Former’s Article on Russia, | Praised by Daily Warker; | Latter's Picture Used.

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, June 24 —That | “politics makes strange bedfellows” | is being thoroughly demonstrated by | the two leading Hoosier presidential

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| possibilities for 1944. { Wendell L. Willkie, 1940 G. O. P. candidate, has written zn article praising Russia in The New Masses, which is widely advertised in the | Communist Daily Worker of New | York And Paul V. McNutt is being giv- ond class in the ground force of en a great play in the same paper; the navy air corps, has taken up because he is going to address a! his duties at Pearl Harbor. Mr. Negro mass meeting in Harlem Sun-| Pock enlisted early in April. He day which is being held under Com- | is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry | B. Pock, 3433 Central ave., and his according to A. Philip Randolph,| wife lives at 20 Guilford ave. prominent anti-Communist labor! | leader. Mr. Randolph is president of the | Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Por- | ters (A. PF. of L)

JAPAN PUSHES oom was HATE CAMPAIGN

i | When Mr. McNutt wired Ferdi{nand C. Smith, co-chairman of the | so- called Negro Labor Victory committee which arranged the Harlem | meeting, that he (McNutt) would | accept with pleasure,” referring to | the speaking date, the story got an | eight- column ribbon in The Daily | Worker.

‘Forcing Its Own Culture on Subjugated Peoples. OWI Reports.

| Monday the paper ran Mr. Me- | WASHINGTON, June 24 (U. P). Nutt’s picture with a 3-column heai; —The cffice of war information |announcing that the speech will be| said today that the Japanese are

{broa Ss 3 | gov 2Reast. is bi, ee He ane | looting occupied areas and forcing manpower commissioner. | its culture and economic controls Co-chairman Smith is a Negro|on subjugated peoples. |Communist and vice president of The OWT said they have institut[the national maritime union. od & Bate ATAPI againe. Amet<

| But while he may be making hay with the Red left-wingers, Mr. Mc- | ica, Great Britain and the Netherwhich is coupled with an

| Nutt drew a goose-egg this week in lands lan article in the so-called “liberal” “Asia for the Asiatics” theme and to the native popu-

i weekly—The New Republic. {1s “being fed” lation through radio, press, posters

and word of mouth. “Man- These reports are based on forMcNutt and Politics.” It was| eign broadcasts monitored by the written by Helen Fuller, who was| federal communications commis- | one-time on the WPA staff here. | sion, The article lists Mr. McNutt’s | Practically all of the Dutch] numerous speaking dates since he| American and British holdings that took over the task of manpower can be operated by the Japanese commissioner and concludes: | have been taken over by private ‘The war manpower commission | companies representing “the finanis one of the most important bodies cial aristocracy of Japan,” the OWI to be established in our war pro- | said. gram. It is no political football.] Typical of this is the General Paul McNutt is treating it like one, | pfotors assembly plant at Tanjonand it should be taken away from sreack, Dutch East Indies, which him and put into better hands.” | as been turned over to the Tor: ridor Automobile Co. The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. plant in the Dutch East Indies is now opcrated bv the Sn Tire Co.

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LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 24 (U. 'P) —Wartime is no time for experiments in social planning, Dr. F. B. Knight, director of the Purdue education and applied psychology di-

vision, told 300 vocational agricul-|

ture teachers meeting at Purdue | yesterday. | “We must come to hate the enemy {enough to hunt him down and kill (thim,” Dr. Knight said. “It calls for | uniform action. Indifferent citizens |

[left at home can dissipate the ef- |

| forts of fighters under arms.”

| Other speakers were Dr. C. T. Ma- |

{lan, state superintendent of public] instruction; Harry F. Ainsworth, state supervisor of agricultural extension. and Prof. Charles Murphy

John E. Pock, machinist sec- |.

TEACHERS ARE TOLD

WAR CONTRACTS WASTE CLAIMED

‘Honeymoon at Taxpayers’ Expense Must End.’

WASHINGTON, June 24 (U. P).| —The house military affairs com-| mittee reported yesterday that it] had found “nearly every conceivable type of extravagant waste” in its

investigation of war department

contracts. The report, presented to the house

|by Chairman Andrew J. May (D. | Ky.) said that the “time has come when the contracts’ honeymoon lat | the expense of the taxpayers of | the nation must end.” | The committee voted 12 to 9 to submit the report to the house. | Dissent members indicated they would file a minority report. The report summarized the find-| —— lings of the committee's inquiries] into various phases of the war program. It said at one point: “Evidence developed by the com- | mittee reveals a ‘sordid picture’ of] excessive commissions by so-called | defense brokers, huge profits by] vendors. exorbitant salaries, bonuses | and fees for management and re-| lated services in many war depart-| ment contracts.”

Stricter Control Urged

The committee added that while] the department had taken steps to} correct conditions when abuses had {been brought to the department's attention, it felt “there is urgent need for a far more stringent control over these practices which persist.” Such control, the committee saic, | should it be exercised by “better | and closer bargaining” on the de-| partment’s part, in which it should] insist on recapturing excessive prof-| its from contractors. “Hundreds of millions” of dollars already have been saved through)

_| legislation requiring a renegotiation

clause in all contracts of more than 18100,000, the report added.

| ‘Endless Red Tape’

i | The committee also criticized “top| heavy organization” and “endless| red tape” in government war agen- | cies and recommended that the secretary of war: Tighten supervision over all ac-| counting and auditing; enforce with greater stringency prohibition of excessive commissions on cost-plus-| fixed-fees contracts; review and ad-| just management fees paid to big! companies for their “services,” and | require all persons employed or re-| tained by contractors in connection| with the procurement of contracts) to file monthly reports with the de-| partment showing all expenses in-! curred. | “Citizens of this country,” the] report said “cannot be expected to] be faced interminably with indifference in spending on the part of| the officials of their government after the period of initial necessity has passed, and continue buying bonds with enthusiasm overlooking the extension of bureaucratic dom-| ination and suffering the depriva-! tions with a EoMiDlbeemt a attitude.” |

STATE PROHIBITION

The Indiana Prohibition party will hold a convention Tuesday at the First Church of the Nazarene, Washington and State sts. The! sessions are to be at 10 a. m, 2 and!

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Prof. F. W. Lough of Winona Lake [will give the keynote speech at the opening session. Other speakers | | will include Dr. D. Leigh Colvin of! 'New York, Prohibition party candidate for president in 1936, and Ed-

ward E. Blake of Chicago, party | national chairman.

The convention will nominate a

| state ticket, elect a central com- | mittee, adopt a platform and formulate plans for the signing of peti- | tions that will place the ticket on

the ballot next November.

JAPANESE DRAFTED

BUT CAN'T ENLIST

WASHINGTON, June 24 (U. P). —The United States army has in iis ranks “three or four thousang” naturalized Japanese. Rep. David D. Terry (D. Ark), | asking Maj. Gen. J. T. McNarneyv | about policy in regard to such Japa- | nese, was informed that “a Japa- | nese citizen is subject to the draft! just like anybody else.” Mr. McNarney, deputy chief of staff, said, however, that “we are not enlisting these aliens. In the case of Hawaii, where there were extremely large numbers of Japanese in the national guard regiments, it became quite a problem.”

LAST MEETING OF SEASON

Golden Rule chapter 413, O. E. 8 will hold its last meeting of the season Friday night at the Masonic temple, North and Illinois sts. Memorial services will be conducted. Miss Ruth Cochrane, worthy matron, and Aubrey Porter, worthy patron, will preside.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

House Group’s Report Says

PARTY TO CONVENE

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1948

4 \ Downstairs Store

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Slack Suits Swim Wear

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Cotton Gabardines

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Finer Rayon Lastex

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BOYS

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multi-color all-

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1.25 Sports Shirts

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TOTS' SIZES—

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