Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1942 — Page 6
H TRURO, Mass., Aug. 27. sians are aiding American efin other fields than those of
ic research in life science, done he Academy of Sciences in Mosf while Nazi bombers were nightng over the city, has thrown 7- light on a problem under ingation by a biochemist working
ndation ‘told the story here at
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the annual symposium of the Society for the Study of Growth, when
he reviewed present knowledge of how molecules grow and multiply. ‘Academician W. A. Engelhardt and his Moscow colleagues were trying to find out how muscle fibers used food energy in the contraction. The picture they got was one of a complex. phosphorus compound, adenylpyrophosphate, being split by the contractile muscle protein. When they made an artificial model of muscle by spinning threads of muscle protéin, much as artificial
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silk is spun, and immersed it in a solution of the energy rich phosphorus compound, the fibers lengthened. They see a muscle as a spring put under tension in this way. When a suitable stimulus is applied the coil snaps back, the muscle contracts. ! This picture, said Dr. Stern,*had helped him considerably in his efforts to understand the growth and reproduction of the big, proteinlike molecules of disease-causing viruses, those ultramicroscopic parEr
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happens when virus particles multiply, Dr. Stern holds, is a piracy of energy from the same kind of phos-
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NATIONALISM
Democrat ‘Internationalism’ _Assailed in Party’s Capital ‘Handout.’
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Aug. 27—Republican “nationalism” vs. Democratic “internationalism” is the issue emerging in the Indiana political campaign according to publicity issued here under the weekly handout heading “Hoosiers in Congress.” This publicity is prepared by Mark Gross, son of ' William Gross, Ft. Wayne News-Sen-tinel editor, who is on the office staff of Senator Raymond E. Willis. This “handout from Washington plan” has the official apDaniel Kidney proval of the Republican state committee.
“Confronted with the fact that no Republicans and only two Democrats of the 196 congressmen who voted against the ‘lease-lend’ bill 18 months ago have thus far failed to secure renomination, leaders of both major political parties are
ment here on three conclusio Mr. Gross wrote.
Isolationism Dead
He listed these alleged conclusions as follows: “1. That the comparatively vague issue of pre-war ‘isolationism’ is now legally dead, but— “2.-That the more specific issue of post-war ‘intervention’ vs. ‘American nationalism,’ is not only alive but growing daily, and— “3. That the latter issue may sharpen a long-blurred line of distinction between the Democratic and Republican parties.” The handout cites the following from a speech delivered by Rep. Forest A. Harness in his campaign for re-election as Republican congressman for the fifth district: “Who really is to blame for our being plunged into this war; for our complete unpreparedness, incompetency, errors, failures and delays to date? “Is there a shred of evidence . . . that opponents of the administration blocked either a more successful foreign policy or the development of adequate military strength?
Claims Confusion by FDR
“There never was a time when the president could not have formulated and followed any foreign policy considered wisest and safest. . + + Instead, he chose to withhold vital information and to confuse fhe people with assurances that his every step was keeping us out of war. “We. must - influence the type of peace which will be written. and the kind of international order which will result, so that we may be insured against the idealistic, foolish twaddle which too many dreamers and planners are now trying to foist upon us.
“Start right now to show the folly of Vice President Wallace's suggestion that we must make rubber only. for the duration, and that we must go back to old sources of natural rubber after the war. “How does Wallace know the British and Dutch will ever be able again to exploit Asiatic labor, or will ever regain their former world monopoly in natural rubber? Assails ‘Dreamers’
“If they do resume domination of those poor peoples, how then do these dreamers expect American labor and farmers to compete? “If we leave these dreamers to their own devices, we may wake up to find that they have traded our high wage scales and good share of our American standard of living for another dream which can never come true.” The “Hoosiers in Congress” handout also quotes Rep. Raymond S. Springer’s condemnation of Presi‘dent Roosevelt's veto of the farm bloc rubber bill and concludes with this comment: “This is what Washington political observers have in mind when they refer to the new political issue of post-war ‘nationalism’ and new American industries — against administration ‘internationalism’ and old-fashioned reliance upon foreign trade. : “And thus far, only two of the 196 American ‘nationalists’ in congress have been defeated by their constituents at the po
RENEWS 2D FRONT DEMAND LONDON, Aug. 27 (U. P.) ~The Daily Express today renewed its demand for a second European front while other newspapers discussed the possibilities of expanding a successful campaign in North Africa into an offensive that would knock Italy out of the war.
Spur
frankly expressing complete agree-|
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