Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1943 — Page 13
SECOND SECTION,
Hoosier Vagabond
By
SOMEWHERE IN. SICILY (by" Wireless) ~A few
] more sketches. of ‘ment on our ship:
Dick Minogue. He has been in the pavy six yours ‘and intends to stay. ‘He is a bosun’s mate 1-c, and may ‘be a ehie: Bette long. ‘He comes from” White
2. yeas Lake, Minn. uo they. call
him “Minny” aboard ship: It is men like Minogue who form the ‘backbone of the present- (@ day.navy. He is young and intel- £¢ - ligent, yet strong and salty enough Pi for any job. He definitely has the ‘ ‘sea about ‘him, but it is modern sea. He wears his bosun’s pipe from a cord around his neck, and a ‘white. hat . cocked way down over one eye. He says the worst moment he ever had in the navy was while piping a British admiral over the side. Dick had .a chew of ‘tobacco in his mouth, and right in- the middle of his refrain the whistle got full of tobacco juice and went gurgly. ~~ Arch Fulton. He is an electrician’s mate 2-¢ fromCleveland. Before the war he was a lineman of the Cleveland Illuminating ‘Co, He is married and has Jo ‘children.
Fulton is 37—much older than: most of the crew. -
is a Scotsman. He came to America 20 years. ugo. Hs parents are still living at Kilmarnock, Scotland. He has a brother who is a sergeant-major in the ‘British . army, and ga sister who is a British WREN.
He's a Smart Man
WC ARCH HAS A short pompadour that slants for-
4
; Inside ; Ndloinpoks Nussbaum
4
Award, giving ‘him the effect of standing with his ‘back to ‘the ‘wind. He has a dry Scottish humor and
% Ry thé'navy in his stride. He used to read this“
ck in Cleveland, so you can See he's; a
2 JOHN .F. WHITE, the veteran civic leader, finally
3 ‘has decided to retire from work. He quit his job as 3 supervisor of private employment agencies with the
state industrial board as of Aug. 1. John is in his 90th year. , , , Capt. Paul Yost, the state forester, is home from Colorado on leave. . . . City Clerk Frank Noll is the proud papa of a baby girl, 6 pounds 10 ounces, born at St. Vincent's Wednesday. . . . We referred the other day to Grant H. Young as being with Gulf. He reminds us he’s district manager of the Ohio Oil Co. marketing division. Gertrude Groebel, the pleasant recepticnist at the Indianapolis C. of C., left yesterday with her sister, Ruth, for a week’s vacation in Washington, New York and Camden. .. . Lou Kelseys, 941 N. Linwood ave. are sending
out anncuncements of the birth of Karolyn Sue, 7
pounds and 2 ounces :
Around the Town
« IU, MEDICAL students who are combining miliy training with their medical training are proudly Ying chevrons as the result of a mass promotion. y've been upped from private to private 1-c. Bealae the ‘honor, it means an increase in pay—13 cents a day more. They new get $54 a month. , . . st Souchon, chef at the I. A. C., was about to lane for California to visit his son, Bob, in ] : rd nes, when he got word not to come, Bob wired was starting out on maneuvers, . Douglas Perry, of the journalism department of Temple uni-
versity, was out at Stout field the other day. He had ‘to go from one building to another, so a little WAC
«was assigned to escort him. En route, the WAC asked " Doug, who'is a big fellow: “Am I walking too fast, sir?” Doug nearly choked. . .. Ray Thomas, secretary-
| treasurer of the Indianapolis Brass & Aluminum Foundry, 850 E. Maryland, mailed an important pack-
to Washington the other day. When it came back, ¢ put more stamps on it, then mailed it again. Again
In London
"LONDON, Aug. 6 (By Wireless).—There was one
: evening in Sicily that I shall never forget.
* We were “following Gen. Patton’s 7th army into
* Palermo—Ermie Pyle of Scripps-Howard, Jack Thomp- : son. of the Chicago. Tribune, and I. We overtook the
82d air-borne division, and as Thompson had jumped with their paratroopers on the invasion we decided to stop overnight. This was no imposition, because everybody was sleeping in the open, on the ground. We just rolled in, picked out trees with low branches so we could hang ‘mosquito nets over our bedrolls, i= borrowed some water to fill our helmets, which are the only wash basins available in the field, and were soon at home, A major we new gave us some heated C rations. It was dusk when we walked over to call on the general. He was sitting at a small table der an olive tree. With him was a colonel, who was
~ playing solitaire, The general was reading a book of .
Stephen Vincent Benet, but he said Ki his Teal favorite, because he wrote of soldiers of all time. The - general quoted some: favorite: passages: I re"member one: “I have eaten you bread and salt, I have drunk your Water and wine, The ‘aeaths ye died I have watched beside, - And the lives ye led were mine.” That, the general said, was why Kipling Wiole of the soldier as he was—he lived with him,
By of Courage
[7 THE MOON was coming up, The colonel folded up ‘his cards. It was that quiet pause which comes so often at sundown, when men say little and you know
np
N nw Dey
_myDE PARK, Thursday.—The month of August is Fius, uot.
Yoh (hisik T99 aro In fe wigle oF
By ‘Ernie Pyle
We have 11 Negro boys aboard, all in the stewards’ “department. They wait table in the officers’
mess, and run the wardroom pantry that keeps hot
coffee going 24 hours a day. They have a separate compartment of their own for quarters, but otherwise | they live just as the white sailors do. ' ‘They are all quiet, nice boys and a credit to the ship. Three of them are exceedingly tall and three exceedingly short. They all have music in their souls. Sometimes I- have to laugh--when the wardroom radio happens to be playing a hot tune during meals I've noticed them grinning to themsclves and dancing ever so slightly as they go about their serving. -
He's Expert Now
I HAVEN'T ROOM to give more than | a couple of their names. One is George Edward Mallory of Orange, Va. He 1s 32, and before the war worked as an un-' loader at a chain grocery in Orange. He has been in the navy for a year and has been operated cn for appendicitis since coming to the Mediterranean, He got seasick once but it doesn’t bother him any more. He is tall, quiet and serious. He had never waited tables before but he’s an expert now. Another one™s Fred Moore, who is the httlest, meekest' and blackest one on ship, Fred has“a tiny mustache that you can’t even see, and a perpetually startled look on his good-natured face. He is very quiet and shy. His home is South Birmingham, Ala. He is just 21 and has been in the navy only since March. He likes it fine, and thinks he may stay in after the war. Before joining up he did common labor at army camps and fruit farms. Fred has a gift.'He is a. wizard at baking delicate and beautiful pastries. He makes all’ ithe. “pastry des-; serts for the officers’ mess. The whole, ‘ship pays. trib ute to his little streak: of ‘genius. ° hs
» ’ “il 3 hake t om»
4
it came back, so he took: it to the postoffice to be weighed. “Right number of stamps.” said the clerk, “but these are 10-cent war stamps you're using.”
Nature Department
JIMMY CHAMPER, 5824 Kingsley dr. who is “almost seven,” is very proud -of a freak ear of corn he helped raise in his dad’s victory garden. It’s really two. ears, grown together at one end to make a nice V for victory. Jimmy brought it to the house for us to see... carefully a cucumber plant with a single cucumber on it. It's an odd-shaped cucumber of the ‘crystal apple” variety. His son, Capt. George O. Lehman, formerly active in the Civic theater, sent him the seed from Australia. Capt. Lehman has been overseas since March, 1942. . . . A reader reports that Mrs. Charles Dawson, the wife of the lieutenant governor, surely must be the clover picking champion, having ‘picked and pressed more than 1000:last year cn the Dawson farm on E. 62d st. Mrs: Dawson gave pressed four-leafers, in cellophane, as souvenirs on dessert for service men at the U.S.O. center in the Roberts Park church the other evening. The boys all cheered, thinking they were shamrocks.
Right Hour, Wrong Day
COUNTY CLERK Jack Tilson got out all the paraphernalia used in. drawing a jury venire yesterday and then paced the floor impatiently for half an hour when the jury commissioners failed to appear. While he was cussing them for being late, a stenographer asked if he'd notified them. “Sure,” he said. “I told them to be here at 11 a. m. Friday.” Jack quit grumbling and blushed when he was reminded that yesterday was Thursday. . . . Buddy Turner, The Times’ proofreader, has had his faith in humanity restored. About 10 days ago, en route home by train from Detroit, he met a young couple with a baby, en route to Terre Haute. They .had a couple’ of big- checks but no cash, and the baby was hungry. Turner shelled out with a loan of $2, He never expected to see the money again, but yesterday he got a letter. In it was a’ money order for $2.
By Raymond Clapper
thelr thoughts are far away. It is not good W talk about home. And so the general got to talking about courage. Three of the group had done parachuté jumping. The general said the night before a jump was the hardest time for him. The colonel said the worst part of it was standing at the open“dqor of the plane looking down and waiting for the signal to jump. Then seconds seemed like frightful hours. Those long pauses’ have now been eliminated sind men jump out. a second apart, one almost pushing the man ahead of him. Thompson. sald the trouble with his jump was that he wasthe last man out of the plane and there was nobody to push him. He just had to step out by sheer willpower. Factors in Courage - THE ‘COLONEL said courage was a combination of filctors. He said all volunteer outfits like the paratroopers ‘had a naturally high. average. of .courage. But-he said individuals varied and the weaker ones
Note brought along by group courage, built up’ over a “long period. - So ‘that although a man may be frightened out of his boots he will go ahead anyway to keep up with his group and prove himself as good | as the others. The colonel thought that was the strongest force in soldiering. 4 It became quite cool and peaceful and quiet. Tired | soldiers were sleeping under olive trees all: around: The general said: - “What a wasteful thing all of this is. Look at all those vehicles around here. “All that is being used up in war.” : : ‘But I suspect that he must have been thinking of his men, some of whom were sleeping back ‘along the
‘rodd and who will never wake up. The camp:was still}:
new. The general said, “If yoy will excuse me.I think I will take a bath.” We. picked our- Pay over fo our bédrolls.
By Eleanor: Roosevelt
In the Hudson tube yesterday, a sailor boy stopped infront of me and handed me a bill used to pay our
“armed forces in Sicily. ~The ribbon he wore told me
he: had just come back fiom :an: active ‘theater of].
minders pe, are on our-wiy remember to autumn do Tot give ‘me a great’ «deal of pleasure, because -this ‘is ‘the time of the year I enjoy most." Not -only because I-can be out of
doors but because the things I do ‘are more nearly connected with the everyday life that people live all over our country and I have be less serie of Jestgiction. thai) wiih in Washington in the White House. ~_ Someane, in print, ‘not long ago d_me to som my Messing: Tor the. years : in the W. House
. war, and I was glad to sign his bill ‘and to have a 5. Sance 10 14Ik-30 him: fof 3.feW minutes.
~The boys who participated in this Sicilian landing 3 ‘You will
described the weather ‘in which they Started their
mark which I think many of us should’ i it is: a pe mE sn gach olor Yegardiess of out tues, ane unifl
bs. aver. Pldestl sue MB) forced dow’ An 3 Turkey. 3 $
‘been on a fully reciprocal basis,
. George O. Lehman, the lawyer, is nursing
| takeoff,
lish offer ‘to help him with an jarmed force in Transcaucasia.
| officers 1s sponsored by the farm university.
T-WAY NATURE
Been Slight if Russ Had" Offered Base.
By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS © Secripps-Howard Foreign Editor WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.— The smashing American air raid on the Ploesti oil fields in Rumania throws a tragic light-on the one-way nature of the collaboartion between the Soviet Union and the Unijd States. Belated reports make it plain that our Liberator bombers played havoe¢ throughout the entire oil region. British as well.as American sources say it was probably the most telling single bombing job of the war. It may change. the whole course of the conflict.
‘planes.
man news agensy: says 67 American bers were: lost~52 shot down.
Weds Bet a
The Nazis are among the world’s best liars, of course, but. if they are anywhere - near the truth in this instance, it would seem that cur losses in the Ploesti raid were approximately 50 per cent. Had Russia and the United States
competent observers here point out, the raid could have been even more effective and at a fraction of the cost in men and materiel. Taking off from Egypt, the botnbers had to fly 1200 miles just to reach the target. And the greater part of the distance was over enemy] territory. It is now known that the planes were spotted at least two hours before they reached : Ploesti. Fully an hour before their arrival their route had been plotted and their destination definitely revealed. The enemy, therefore, had ample time to prepare a hot reception. The ack-ack’s were tuned up to concert pitch and every fighter plane available was already in the air—poised, high up, pounce on the oncoming raiders,
A Shorter, Better Route
Had the Americans taken. off from the Russian Kuban, say from around - Krasnodar, the flying distance would have been halved. Not only that, but the flight would have been almost éntirely over the Black sea. Instead of a two-hour Warne ing, the defenders of Ploesti would have had at most some 25 minutes, because the ‘ofl fields, just north of Bucharest, are not far from: the coast. . Equally important, the same bombers could have carried double the bomb load. The 2400-mile round trip from North Africa required an enormous amount of gas at the drastically reducing the weight of bombs that could be carried along. The 15 bombers said to have been foreed down irr Turkey on the retyrnt Would have reached home _safély had they been based in
near Cairo. The raid was figured out in advance as carefully as was humanly possible, They laid out a Scale model of the Ploesti target. The airmen studied it for weeks—from the ground énd from the air. Finally they bombed the medel in a full-dress Jebeazsal. Nothing that could contribute to the success of the expedition was overlooked, down to the smallest detail. : A Line Was Prawn’: " Surely, ‘therefore, the allied strategists must have had more than one look at the map of the Balkans and the Middle ‘East. ' They must have comptited the distances from alternative bases to Ploesti again and ‘again.’ It so, they could not have overlooked the advantages of bombing ‘any Rumanian objective from the eastern shore of the Black Officials here are » on. the bject. But it ue an open secret t Russia long ago ‘drew ‘a - line across’ the map and, in effect, said to her allies: “Now you stay. on your side of that line.” For some reason or other Marshal Stalin appears to be unalterably opposed to British or American’ troops fighting side by side with the Russian army. Even ‘when the Nazis were aetually beginning to break through the barrier of the Caucasus, Stalin is said to have turned down @ Brit-
Presumably the same objections prevented the Ploesti raiders from taking off from et soil.
POST-WAR AS THEME
OF FARM MEETING for the ine Nae and Plat of the ' sixth annual training ’ schoo! for Indiana rural
(university. The school for club leaders and
OF SOVIET AID,
U. S. Losses Would Have
It is; equally. plain, however," that the raid ‘was’ ‘cotly. in lives and our side has not’ yet: “Te | leased - -allithe; ‘details. But the Ger-|
ready to.
the Caucasus region instead of]
[youth ‘clubs, Aug. 17-20, at Purdue}
A Liberator Wings Close to Ploesti Smokestacks
Groping through a heavy pall of smoke from fires started by incendiary bombs, a 9th air force Liberator yaily misses a row of smokes stacks as it flies over Ploesti, Rumania, This photo, made during the raid of Aug. 1, was radioed to New York from Cairo today and telephotoed to The Indianapolis Times, , : :
SUSPENDED FOR
BEER ON DUTY,
Safety Board Drops Charge of Police Brutality Against Patrolman.
Patrolman Louis A, Baker today Stood cleared. of ‘charges of pelice brutality, but. faced a 60 day suspension for. drinking while on duty. At a safety board .trial yesterday, two youths who had accused Baker of striking them without provocation on July 14 in front of a diner at Virginia ave. and Prospect st. failed to appear as “witnesses. - Testifying for himself, the patrolman stated that he had “simply dispersed - a: gang of Fountain Square boys that has created disturbances ‘in that neighborhood, ” He said he had- “pushed the youths,” but had not hit them with his nightstick- as they had charged. After. deSpector Jack Small’ told board members that Baker had an “alcoholic breath” when he reported the incident, the patrolman admitted that he had had “one bottle of beer” before going on his beat. 1He added, however, that in 22 years on the police force he had never before been accused of rules infractions. ‘The safety board dated his suspension on: the alcoholics charge, effective from July ‘14.
LOCAL YOUTHS WIN I. U. ROTC AWARDS BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Aug. 6.— Kenneth E. Hauck ‘and David 'C. Sever, both of Indianapolis, were among 24 Indiana .university. students who received commendations for meritorious military work at the semester’s final review of the R. O. T. C. , Hauck received an award for being the neatest cadet in his company, while Sever was one:of three freshmen commended for drill work.
MAILING RATION BOOK
WASHINGTON, sertion that the low-level. attack:
the question of the relative dccuracy
other installations from altitudes of many thousand feet. Normally the heavy four-motored bombers—including the B-24 Liberators which raided Ploesti, and the B-17 Flying Foriresses—are used for high-level bombings. They are ordinarily out of their element in low-level attacks. However, <because +0f ithe Human. and mechanical errors involved in highlevel bombing, low-level bombing can achieve greater precision.
Destructiveness Assured
The inaccessibility and importance of the Rumanian target may have influenced the choice of the lowlevel attack to assure the maximum destructiveness. Range precluded the possibility of light twin-motored bombers, such as normally are employed in lowlevel bombing, from making the Ploesti attack. The Liberators were obliged ' to fly '2400 miles to and from the ‘target and their Middle East base,
The - 9th air force may have gambled on the chance of avoiding detection with the low level attack—a considered risk—and lost. The fact is that a low level approach is not so likely to be recorded by radio detection’ gauip ment and possibly by other types of observation. Reports indicated that the flight began along the route to Italy and ‘Sicily, which ‘the bombers turned away from after passing ‘Crete where their passage was isely to be observed by the enemy.
' High Losses Expected :
Stimson noted that the attack, carried out at 100 to 500 feet; which thus guaranteed pin-point accuracy, also involved the maximum of danger and likelihood of resistance.
DEPENDS UPON HELP|
Two hundred volunteers a day are
needed at the ration book mailing center -if late applicants are to get book 3 on time. Until filing of applications for book 3 is completed, Burch Nunley, mailing center director, said, late applicants will not get their books. The mailing center at 36 S. Penn-
* While ‘ground ~ forces “adequately equipped with anti-aircraft weapons and forewarned could be expected to inflict high losses: on low. level} attackers, there are sotne offsetting factors. Low-flying bombers cannot beattacked from underneath. Unless the anti-aircraft’ guns ‘are trained and manned the low-flying bombers
sylvania st. is open from 8 a. m. to
might succeed in flying in and out} of range of ground defenses before
10 p. m. each day.
Birthday Gifts
Ready, Youth
‘Dies From Policeman’ s Bullet
A large stack of birthday gifts for Frederick ‘Hopper Jr. 16, lay unopened at his-home, 411 Dorman ave, today while his family made
arrangements fo take ‘the “youth's
body to Mitchell, Ind. and burial,
for funeral
_He was shot and killed by a mer-
Boribers Lovilavel Attack Assured Pin-poift Accuracy
By RUEL S. MOORE United Press Staff’ Correspondent
bug. 6.—Sécretaty of War Henry L. Stimson’s as-
’
of “American heavy bombers on
Rumanian oilfields guaranteed pin-point ‘atcuracy rafsed anew today
of ‘high-level and low-level bombing.
Army men are proud of the accuracy of their “high-level precision | bombing. Army fliers consistently drop bombs on factories, docks and
the guns could be trained and fired on them. “The enemy apparently received sufficient warning of the raid to prepare defenses,” Stimson said in giving details of the raid. Of the 177 bombers involved, 15 or 20 were shot down at the scene, about as many others were unaccounted for,” and “eight landed in Turkey—a loss of more than 20 per cent of the planes engaged. More than 50 enemy fighters were destroyed. Experts consider bombing oper-|sc ations economical as long as losses are kept under 10 per cent. American losses in combat over Europe have been around 6 per cent. But it is not considered serious, against targets of great strategic importance — Ploesti represented one-third of the axis oil resources— if losses exceed that average, a raid in which all the attacking planes were lost might be considered :successful if the target were of sufficient importance.
SEEK OWNERS * 18 SLOT MACHINES
Police today were seeking the owners of 18 slot machines confiscated by raid squads in a vacant house at 626 Madison ave. Officers who stumbled on the loot yesterday while investigating re-. ports that youths were burglarizing the place, believed the house served [Do as a storehouse for a gambling syndicate, Police also seized punchboard, spare slot-machine parts and several automatic phonographs. Sgt. Leo M. Trautman said he
‘| hoped to trace suspects through
records of a novelty company taken along with the gaming equipment. He added that warrants will be is~ sued as soon as officers of the firm are located. Meanwhile, in a mid-summer reaffirmation. of the administration’s d anti-gambling policy, Police f Beeker yesterday ordered frequent inspections of pool rooms, taverns and smokers in an effort to tighten the lid on baseball ticket sales. The chief said baseball and other pool tickets were being supplied in the city by out-of-town lottery operators.
ELLIOTT. RECEIVES - NEW Y. M.’C. A. POST
Clarence Elliott, ‘former student
{Indiana university Y. M. C. A.
|WOULD BAR F,D.R.
-
FROM PEACE TABLE
a WASHINGTON, Aug. 6 (U. P)— i Senator Ellison D. Smith (D.8.0)| i President
. pEnam
TWIN RIBBONS r
4-H CLUB SHOW
132 From Wayne Township Rate Entry in Coming / County Exhibition.
ning exhibits in the Wayne ip 4-H club display will be red in the Marion county 4-H lub exhibit Mofiday, Tuesday and Wednesday at the Indianapolis Powe & Light Co. hall,
Blue ribbons were awarded to 133 3
4-H club members yesterday for .. their entries in the Wayne towns ship exhibit. Entries totaled 365. The following girls, Feceived, ribe
bons: Clothing—Carol Baird, Pauline Brows Jacqueline Enmarck, Mariana Miller, Joan Sexton, Barbara Slaughter, Barbara Time mons, Lorraine Kettleson, Rosemarie Mare tin, Martha Stahl, Rosemary Fuller, Eile Entwistle, Joan well, Margar huh, Rose Marie Martin, Juanita Save age Ida Grider, Martha Miller, Rose Marie $ilideveay), Berneice Kendall, Rosana Miles : ler, Iva Monger, Laura Mo er, Maxine Ruffin, Patricia Bailey, Barbara Clark, Leona ‘Calvert, Pauline Syria ger. Jolepiing , Eileen Howard, rtin, Wanda Bandy, June Davis, Virginia Fare rel, Betty Licht, Patty Wilson, Jane Bourne, Uldene Christenberry, Janet H Dorothy .Jellison, = Patty. Ma, Schimmel, Marilyn Hastings, etty Barnes, Evelyn Albrecht, Josephine Stepro, Vire ginia Scott, Barbara Kent, Charlottee Dilly Ellen Miller, Patricia Alexander, Mary Moore, Rosemary Konrad, 1 Van Ywiller. Iris Jordan and Phyllis Price, Baking—Carol Baird, Nancy Best, Maris ana Miller, Jacqueline Enmarck, Barbars Slaughter, ‘Barbara Timmons, Lorraing Kettleson, Joan Watson, Mary Armstrong, Linda Bell Wilson, Mary Ranck, Bonita Glidewell, Berneice Kendall, Rosana Miller, Pauline bringer, Joan Booher, Wands Bandy, Sally Brown, Doris Duncan, Lorn® Ellis, Virginia Ferrel, Mary Barnes, Patt Claxon, Janet Miller, Uldene Christenbe: Jean - Alexander, "Barbara Kent, Jordan and Phyllis Price. Food Preparation—Jean Watson, Betty Bogue, ‘Rosemary Fuller, Betty Dishman, Venice House, Phyllis Terrell, Jean Kessler, Eileen En wistle, Dawn House, Mareen Schuh, Martha Miller, Rosana Miller, Laura 1 Moore, Patty Wilson, ) berry, Josephine Stepro and Virginia
Canning-—Patricia Kafoure, Martha Mile’ ler, Barbara Timmons, Betty Hoover, Rose Mate Martin, Jesh Watson, Ida Gt
tin, Dorothy ve Miller, Evelyn Albrecht, Jean Alexande Charlotte "Dillingham, Dorothy Albrech! Patricia Alexander, and Iris Jordon. Room Jmprovemenii>-Mary Ranck Iva Monges Gard ng~—Carolyn ‘Bolander and. Irie ; Jordan.
JOB’S DAUGHTERS TO INSTALL OFFICERS
Bethel 11, Order of Job’s Daughe ters, -will hold - council - installation ceremonies at 2 p. m. tomorrow, "Those to be installed include Mrs, Helen Bass, guardian; Hershel Ginn, associate guardian; Mrs, Eva Di
enderfer, secretary; Mrs. Nove Groover, treasurer; Mrs. Arth Carmichael, director of music, an Mrs. Bernice Higgins, director associability. v Mrs. Mae Marcum Jacobs, past
Iris
supreme guardian and organizer of
Job's Daughters in Taian, will preside, . {Gh
HOLD EVERYTHING
