Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1943 — Page 36

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similar results by destroy-| ing the country itself and millions | of people who are still within the power of his 8. 8. (elite guard) and wehrmacht, i Russia now has a battle with hunger, exposure, diseases and so- | cial disorganization in which the lives of millions of civilians hang “in the balance. | el ‘Hitler believed, according to Prav-/ da, Communist party journal, that! “by creating .a . “permanent desert i - gone,” he could defeat the Soviet | people, | : Question of Ald |

W. Averell Harriman, new U. 8. ambassador, in. his first. public statement in Moscow, said that the question of aid for the period of | ‘rehabilitation was one which will be studied here with Foreign Com. | missar Viacheslav M. Molotov and “British Ambassador Sir Archibaid | ~ Clark- Kerr, a “The Red Cross and Russian reNef committees and similar agen-| eles in Great Britain, Canada, Australia and. other... countries. are! more and more turning their | energies towards the problem of ‘helping stripped and suffering peo- | ples of Hitler's artificial “desert.” | “Those of us. who had. had some, opportunity to see something of * the. extent of this devastation can scaréely comprehend it; it is on $00 large a scale, on

: Size of Cincinnati + Imagine, if you can, a city the eitinant:

# LCRYe AR on woof qr window; with no buildings, left more than two stories high and andful of dazed, stunned: and weary people emerging like cave dwellers from cellars or dugThat Is Stalingrad or Rostov, | South Bend or Duluth, would be Novorossisk. | _As for great, industrial Kharkov, | think of Cleveland without water, | or light, or street cars; with its | a central bffildings fire-black- | ened shells; with its bridges sag-| ging wearily into the river or block- | ing the railroads with great piles of teel and concrete, | what the Nazis have done

In terms of the United States it C from the northern tip ‘Maine to the southern border of and Kentucky, westward | from Ilinois. Its normal population 48 approximately 40,000,000. From the endless steppes of the | Stalingrad area the district shades

Westward, it in-|

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beet acreage, the Don basin which | ‘only a few years ago produced more | than half of the Soviet Union's coal. | the industrial centers from whose | furnaces ‘came 60 per cent of the gountry’s iron and almost 50 per «ont of its steel, and the refineries ‘that produced 70 per cent of its | : “Trying to breathe life again into

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* TENT 9 MEETS MONDAY . ‘Catherine Merrill, tent 9, Daughof Union Veterans of the | War, will meet at 1:30 p. m. fay at Ft. Friendly, Nomina-

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Purdue's Boile: undefeated, unti them and an eye in the Big Ten tle arch-rival In attempt to regair “Old Oaken Bu

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