Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1943 — Page 8
'GOEBBELS, German propaganda minister, told | creep! 43 cab and i obo will bes limit fo Amer Promafe Program Under Compulsion 13 Joe, for once, you're right. There will be a limit. That ENDER THB GUOAKD shob. Shick 1. the ere: “limit Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill already have. tersely meen hat, throug defined as “unconditional surrender.” : ; the. agency. of & whinetie ot ake political party, Ti . against their choice, would-be compelled “PD LET THEM DIE,” HE SAYS i income tax to promote a program alien and HE election of Henry J. Kaiser as president of the Brewster Aeronautical Corp. is encouraging. There is a real mess in the Brewster plants. ° Kaiser was made chairman of the board of Brewster a few months ago at the instigation of the navy, for which 4 Brewster makes airplanes—though not enough of them. . But Kaiser seems to have felt a need to be closer to the operation, so Frederick Riebel Jr. (another navy - protege) hs hoy pen pulled out of the presidency to give Kaiser i zimmer , cotton ant a hand. ; A free hand and a strong one is obviously needed. A Songrets, 1» a of shane en Pepe
few days ago some of the difficulties of thie Brewster opera- | has flouted, in some mathers, the orders of the bosses | —
tions were described in an excellent piece of reporting by | ™ .u. "roceless recipient, whose racelessness is conAgnes E. Meyer, wife of Eugene Meyer, publisher of the | stantly thrown up to him in those left-wing writs
FR » “ and orations which deny him human individuality wi ashington Post. Mrs. Mey er spoke of past and Pp resent and call him “The Masses,” is then not merely
incompetence on the part of management,” and of a labor- reminded that he ought to register, but is practically
3 : or " management relationship so dominated by a labor union | ordered to enroll in the American Labor party. ! h H F that discipline was non-existent, loafing the rule, “stop- Confirmed by Return Postcard ec 00Sl1€r orum pages” frequent, and absenteeism rife. ; #7 y wholly Sisagres with amt J say, but wil ; ; 18" \ “be sure”-to enroll in the our ri say it.— ire. She quoted President Rjebel as saying about the com- | HE tosis Wonton: 30 soll 1 18 Jing ef Ul ght to say pany’s contract with the U. A. W. (C. L 0.): . | emphatic, our subject was sent a return. postoard, : ; —— “If it is strictly invoked by labor, management has | addressed to Dear Brother Zimmerman, dressmakers’ | “PEACE MUST REMAIN (Times: readers are invited 10 tives It cannot: hire or transfer men, change | Rion, local 23 of the garment workers, reading: |A TOPPLING TOWER" fo express their views in dtncipling or d se with nis-la-40 notify-you Inst 1 Rave Tegistered andl my Ira Rel Warmington these columns, religious conshifts, use discipline or do anything else without the | enrolled in the American Labor party.” Bu Jong-as sirsiegy, dip ip . oh - 0.K. of the shop committee, and every single move involves | Of course, Dear Brother Zimmerman could §0 10 |. 0t treaties and military Sa: a Nau
+h i a the rolls to check for his own purposes, the extent such lengthy arguments that thousands of man-hours are of which we do not know, whether the subject had |F®mAin as active, or even remem-| 0 14 be limited to 250
lost over the slightest move the nanagement tries‘to make. | jpeyed his very pointed suggestion, but the return |bered terms in the vocabulary of ear Te The union leaders can do as they please, how, when and | postcard method constitutes a much more convenient | any man on earth, the term peace| Ce a where.” 2 way. 3 : : s toppling rainbowed sig ~ Opinions set fort ‘os eee | Ae mt tain to rtm the card uid be (00 TEN VRE DT! hare ore ths of the wir __AND she quoted Tom De Lorenzo, president of the union fang we need not be told that an individual whohas| ws a and. publication : in 1g way : _- Ei <= | 10st" his identity In “The Masses” under union rul¢ [ALLIES OWE DEBT =e impies-agres ment-with-thoss: +. “Our policy is not to win the war at any cost. The |'® sublect to subtle punishments for political heresy. lp gyjggra opinions by The Times. The policy of our local union is to win the war without sacri- | Familiar Method of Unions By & Reader Times essumes no responsi-
ficing loo many of the rights which we have . .. TIME 18 SAID io have been when the } of | 1 Dave not yet met a soldfer who| bility for the return of manu.
i i is war i ipts and cannot enter. core “The most important thing in this war is to. preserve | soulless corporations similarly . trampled would not be delighted if Soviet| scripts THe pe . v rights of workers but this firing i forces marched into Berlin tomor- respondence regarding them.)
row.. Were it not for the Russians,
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local, as saying:
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~ the system of government that we have, among other things, and the procedure for adjudicating unién troubles. > “All my life I have found force to be the only effective | power equally as great and ruthless, is a familiar of Pr 1 A SUGGESTION hi
: Cg : > if- it | method of the New Deal's political subsidiaries, the . weapon. Sometimes you Just have to use it, even if it unions, and is defended and praised as a great gift 2 1 ; By Bored Reader, Indianapolis.
means stopping the planes . .. to the once free American citizen and worker, : A suggestion to eliminate all this “If I had brothers at the front who needed the 10 or| That no ostensibly voluntary labor organisation . ; quarreling between defense (it
: T io. } has any right to dictate or supervise the political should be war) werkers and non12 planes that were sacrificed, I'd let them die, if necessary, | Jo 0 Tr 0 embers & a iD Ta UTIs In Boower Toros
to preserve our way of life or rights or whatever you want | 5 Worke: alte, 4 Te ie, Tite wv. yous, tet [us ua ® ad EE We hate to think about the epithets that will be applied | T™¢ 9ay's lesson seems to call for no tag-line. 1 cs - tions Jere Jas cut the fatiary
to De Lorenzo if clippings of Mrs. Meyer's article turn up ary. . | national conclave in Philadelph
~ aboard the aircraft carriers. : y 7 November. 0 But De Lorenzo seems to have’ respect for - Kaiser. We the People vy — wil ote’ President Roosevelt th . Perhaps they can get together and get things rolling, in- ‘ d - stead of limping, at Brewster. And in the meantime, the | By Ruth Millett open hearings on the Brewster situation just scheduled | by a house subcommittee for next Wednesday should be | § interesting. Especially if De Lorenzo is a witness.
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1C.1.O. Pattern?
'| By Fred W. Perkins
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L. THE SENATE ON THE WAR FRONTS . | THOUGH the senate heard in secret session a report of . its special committee which has returned from a world | Ji ; Worker (a) grabs phone (b) to investigating tour of the global fronts, the report's general : Sompiain, _ nature is fairly well known. Press statements of Chairman Russell for the entire group, and of Senator Chandler, : . Slumber. and Senator Lodge's senate speech indicate the high impor- way. : “TELL Fa , tance of their mission and findings. 2 I, or RICA Ar The range of subjects is wide—all the way from mili- |r . tary strategy, such as possible use of Siberian bases against & Japan, and the question of combining army, navy and air Hid § forces under one department and a unified command, to a sale of Sur ou io has dou bled ang per cen protection of American raw materials and acquisition of ' Y x - post-war bases. The extent to which the committee is Doesn't Make Pretty Picture ° _ agreed on detailed solutions is not entirely clear, But there seems to be surprising unanimity as td major facts and general recommendations. This is remarkable because the special committee represents both political parties, different sections of the coun- ~ try, and various committees of the senate. It is proof of the ability of senators, when dealing with national defense and foreign policy, to rise above partisan politics and regional tniterests to the plane of statesmanship.
pro ss » » ® = » 2 CAN the senate, as a body, debate and act on these issues © In the same constructive and nonpartisan spirit as its i committee? If so, it can do much to reclaim its constitu- | onal function of sharing such policy responsibilities with executive branch of government. 5 ~~ But with the best intent and most patriotic spirit, the penate still could not function in that way without much
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