Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1945 — Page 5
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FRIDAY, FEB, 9, 1945
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— ___ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ° HAE
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ON WORLD FOOD
Expert Terms Foreign Hope For Full Relief as ‘Great Tragedy.’
By CLAIRE COX United Preds Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Feb. 9—Dr. Anton J.
termaster corps, said yesterday that the belief the American bread basket will be full enough to feed the world after the war is “one of the war's great tragedies.” The “hard truth” is that this country will be able to do little more than keep peoples in warravaged nations alive — principally through shipments of whole grains, he said. Carlson is president of the American Society for the Advancement of Scienoe and a member of the University of Chicago faculty. “Yet we Americans waste in the kitchen and at the table enough food to feed 10 or 15 million people,” he said in an interview.
Calls for Saving
“We could help the world, at least temporarily, if we reconstructed our wasteful habits and so much food did not go into the garbage
can.” Carlson said the size of post-war grain shipments must of necessity depend on farm production and domestic needs, “but by judicial care, we can spare enough to sustain life until foreigners get started in their ‘own food production.” He added that it would be some time before agriculture is restored
abroad because families have been
scattered ahd many farmlands have become battle fields filled with bomb and shell craters. “The principal problems in feeding the world, however, will be economic,” Carlson said.
Free Food Questioned . $“How manpy-nations can continue
to starving countries—even-if there
give all people a good diet? “How quickly and by what means can we restore and improve agriculture in war-devastated countries, a task that must be done at the expense of better-supplied and wealthier nations?” Economically, he said, this country's ability to feed the world is
Grain raised domestically is used for livestock feed. Skim milk is turned into plastics ‘and paint, and wheat germ, the most valuable part | of wheat, is milled-out of flour and | fed to live stock,” he pointed out. | “But you cannot reconstruct in-
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Carlson, consultant to the military | planning section of the army quar-|
for how long to provide food freed’
were. food enough in the world to :
limited by agricultural policies.
~
| { > ! | : : Ee Calson added. To feed our neigh- ‘WILLKIE BOOK FIRST w . . ‘ ' n Tes extensively, ‘Farmers would] CHICAGO, Feb. 9 (U. P).—J.
have to find other food for hogs Dwork, president of the Décalogue
|and chickens; industry would need Society .of Sawyers sald yesterday es | manufacturing®substitutes, and ma- the club has learned that the first | KEEP {chinery would have to be developed book published by - the ‘Danish YOUR
to powder milk in large quantitiés undergtound . press Willkie's “One World.”
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