Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1945 — Page 17

| Hoosier Vagabond

’ TAT ERINAWR TORE Radiol An “hour ahd aw A Vey cae the seoont Waves St Of our

half before H-hour at Okinawa, our vast naval fleet began its final, mighty bombardment of the shore with its big guns. They had been at it for a week, but this was a concentration whose fury hadn't been approached before. The power of the thing was ghastly. -- Great sheets of Hame would flash out from a battery of guns, gray brownish smoke would puff up in a huge cloud, then the

crash of sound and concussion

would carry across the water and hit you. Multiply that by taundreds and you have bedlam. Now and then the smoke trom a battlewagon would come out in a smoke ring, an enormous one, 20 or 30 feet across, and float upward with perfect symmetry. Then came our carrier planes, diving on the beaches. And torpedo planes, carrying heavy bombs and incendiaries that spread deep red flame. Smoke and dust rose up from the shore, thousands of feet high; until finally the land was completely veiled. . Bombs and’ strafing machineguns and roaring éngines mingled with the blended crash of naval bombardment and seemed to drown out all existence. The ghostly concussion set up vibrations in the pir—a sort of flutter—which pained your ears and pounded upon you as though some almighty being were heating you with invisible drumsticks.

Water a ‘Turmoil of Mov eens DURING ALL this time the waves’of assault craft were forming up behind us. The water was a turmoil of movement. Dispatch and ‘control ‘hoats were running about. LSM's and LST's were moving slowly- forward to their unloading

‘Areas,

Motor torpedo boats dashed around as guides. Even the destroyers moved majestically “acfoss the: fleet as they closed .up for the bombardment of the shore. From our little control ship and thé scores like it, waves af assault craft were directed, advised, hurried up, or slowed down. H-hour was set for 8:30. By 8 a. m. directions were being radioed and a voice hooméd out to sea to form up Waves | and 2, to hurry up, to get things moving. Our first wave consisted solely of heavy guns on amphibious tanks which were to wade ashore and blast out the pillboxes on the, beaches, One minute

foot, troops. After that, waves came at about 10-minute intervals. Wave 6 was on its way before Wave 1 ever hit the beach, Wave .15 was moving up before Wave 6 got to the beach. That's the way it went, { ‘We were on the control boat about an hour. I felt miserable and that awful weight was still on my heart. There's nothing romantic whatever in knowing that an hour from now you ihay be dead. And, the fury of our bombardment was in te . Some officers I knew came: aboard.” They weren't going ashore unti] afternoon. They wanted to talk. I simply. couldn't carry on a conversation. - I'7just couldn't talk.

Cigars=For the Colonel I WENT below fo use a civilized toilet for the last time in many days. I got a drink of water, though I wasn't thirsty. Then one sailor came up and introduced himself and said he read the column. Then a knot ‘of sailors gathered around on deck. One sailor. with black, close-cropped hair and glasses offered me a cigar. I didn't even have the! wit = put down his name. 1 told him I didn’t smoke cigars, but I would take one for our regimental colonel who practically lives | on cigars, and was about out of them, A few minutes later the sailor came up with five] more cigars to give to the colonel. They wanted to give me candy, cigarets, and cookies but I told them | I already hall plenty. Word came by radio that Waves '1 and 2 were | ashore without much opposition and there were no | mines on the beaches. So far, so good. We looked at the shore through binoculars, We could see tanks moving across the fields and the men | of the second wave walking inland, standing upright. | There were a few splashes in the water at the beach, but we couldn't make out any real fire coming from the shore, po It was all very indefinite and yet it was indicative. The weight began to lift. I wasn’t really conscious of ‘But I found myself talking more easily with the sailors, and somehow the feeling gradually took hold of me that we were to be spared. The Tth wave was to pick us up as it came hy. I didn’t even see it approaching. Suddenly they called | my name and said the boats were alongside. I grabbed my pack: and ran to the rail. I'm glad they came: suddenly like that. The sailors shouted, ! “Good luck,” over and over and waved us off. We were on our way.

Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum

SOME TIME back, this column mentioned that Lt Bob Pace wrote home from-New Guinea that the slogan of the boys over there was: “Back Alive in 45." Well, Bob's .in the Philippines now, and the boys have changed slogans. The new one is: “The . Golden Gate in 48.” Seriously, though, he writes, some of the boys are hoping against hope that they'll be back in the states in time to return to school in September, '46. . . . Arthur Dick-

son, 325 E. Walnut, has been ob-, was so strong he had to give it up. Meanwhile, his

serving the park department's efforts to trap pigeons and he thinks they're not going about it

the News showed her as an equally attractive blond | = Some research among bowlers brings the irfformation | that both pictures are all right, It just happens that | The, Times’ picture is more ‘recent than that of the News. You know how changedble these women are! . « There was quite a bit of excitement up around the Armory on N. Pennsylvania yesterday morning. The wind broke the lanyard on the flagpole atop the Armory, leaving the flag to flap around with abandon at the end of the rope. Capt. John Hanson, the bullding superintendent, tried to get at it with a ladder placed against the swaying flagpole, but the wind

phone was being bombarded with calls from flag-| conscious . citizens who thought something ought to| be done. Finally, he thought of the solution.

By Ernie ; Pyle

|is getting patchy, particularly when | {both laundering and dry

| from racks and shelves,

| Germany, the deeper the, mysteries grow.

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SECOND SECTION

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FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1945

By S. BURTON HEATH and DOUGLAS LARSEN’ .... NEA Staff Correspondents

"ASHINGTON, April 6.—We can keep secrets as well asthe next fellows can, but this one ha= leaked out already in some mysterious fashion. There's evidence of a clothing shortage in the United ‘States. 2 Mothér wants a house dress. | VS § sn’t a thing to {plies actually are greater than beShe Says he hasn g fore the war, and it is only the ‘put on her back. Father | prosperity-intensified demand that needs a white shirt to wear to makes many goods hard to obtain, church. Sister - would look sweet | The most acute shortages, in or=in dotted swiss or voile. And baby | der of tightness, are in work gloves, : work clothing, children’s clothing brother can't go around, yet, with |and women’s. stockings. lout diapers. Papa's and big broth-| Government agencies insist that ler's work pants are disgracefully there is plenty of raw cotton and ragged and their work gloves just' machines with which to fabricate it. |aren’t, any mare. The rest of the family’ wardrobe|

” » » THE SHORTAGE, so far as cotton goods go, is in manpower. The Office Civilian Requirements also insists there is and has been no

shortage of wool clothing for either . 8°21 men or women, but that the apTHERE is a clothing shortage ,e.rance of one has been created here, though in any other country |p. a tremendous spurt in demand

in the world, today, ‘eyes would |p, the disappearance of certain pop almost out of heads if our re-|¢ oi nite fabrics.

tail stocks were suddenly made available there. The clothing situation, for ‘the entire family, is in its worst condition “since the war began, Item after item has disappeared

cleaning keep garextended

take so long that they of ments out of use for.

periods.

| OCR, but manpower is not adequate to fabricate enough to sate isfy demand. » n » ONE MAJOR reason for the ap-

Many desirable garments. dre go- JPearance of shortage has been over(ing to be harder to find this sum- concentration, upon the more exmer and autumn than ever before. pensive garments, which makes it un =n difficult, and sometimes impossible, BUT EXCEPT in certain lines,|to find moderate-priced suits and, | there ‘really is no shortage. For dresses. dlmost everything that can't be| This is to be remedied by -a new | had, there is a fairly acceptable program of allocating most of the| | substitute. available yarns to lower-priced garIn at least some instances sup-| ments.

[WARTIME LIVING . . . A REPORT FROM WASHINGTON ON THE HOME FRONT—

Why It Is Getting Harder to Buy Clothing

SAS

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k

"insist.

Wool itself is not scarce, says the -

Collegiate fad of wearing blue ~

denim has contributed to shortage of work clothes,

COLLEGE GIRLS and their imtrouble- with work clothing.

They are running around in denim slacks made with material

that should have been used for!

GERMAN WAR MYSTERIES GROW AS ALLIES ADVANCE—

Most Nazi Stores Are Well-Stocked

By HENRY J. TAYLOR, Scripps-Howard Special Writer HEIDELBERG, Germany, April 6.—The farther we penetrate into

In great stretches east of the Rhine our advance has been so rapid

the right way. “When I was a called the fire department, and firemen remedied the | by the war.

boy,” he says, “I decided to go into the pigeon raising business. I started out with one pair—all I could afford. An old man told me if I would get some anise oil and place some of it on the pigeons, I'd soon have quite a flock. I tried it and he was right. Pigeons react to anise oil just like cats do to catnip, and a lot of other pigeons followed my original pair home, The city could establish a cote on a public building, scatter some arise oil, and a few homers could lead the entire Joven. Bock into

Xo MEER

NT leave, as “decided i rey rok is a % mare dangeroiis than thé fighting front. in both the African and French invasions and es-

He participated"

situation, using a big aerial ladder truck. That ended the phone calls.

Mauldin Is Right

THE CITY'S newest “lake” is out at Sky Harbor | airport. It's really just a large puddle, resulting from |

|

the recent heavy rains. But students have named it | “Lackey’s lake”—in honor of Gordon Lackey, the|: . Most of you probably noticed |:

airport director. Mauldin’s cartoon on this page Tuesday—the one showing the G. I. politely carrying his helmet while ig ISS SES AP 1 Ri thought the artist was drawing on his na nation by showing a fighting female at’ the front. But it was |»

I have not seen even so much as a broken window here. There may| be ‘factories in the outskirts which | | were bombing targets and are de-|/see something here they couldn't | molished But German life as it (buy at home. | was during the | You can read Berlin ‘newspapers, war is to be seen which until a few days ago were on all ‘sides here. delivered to the newsstands here by | | The “fat” still airmail—or you can read the local | tin this land is| paper, a full-sized daily. amazing. Ger- | Bicycles. by the hundreds,

1 A

pol- |

1G , 1 went into a elberg: university's ‘halls. Their | number of radio | tires are good and so are the tires

08. voll. down. Abe Bh aE ih if: rrody or retail

these boys and girls right now in a|

hundred German towns. Within the last few weeks I have

‘been in England, France, Belgium!

and Italy. Thus is possible a simul-|

He! {and so unopposed that some cities—such as Heidelberg—are untouched taneous comparison of the condi- |

[tion of each ‘people. s s

" IN GERMANY the people look

{than the British. The Germans aré a lot better off

| than the French or the Belgians—|

|-and overwhelmingly better off than! the Italians. The number of young men ob- | viously of military dge on the | streets of ‘the villages and ciffes is

i dude. NE Amamtirn i et

aA wo rywhere. “Phere ‘are "so anyy

is a fair perceritage mugt ‘have|

work pants, shirts, overalls, frocks, etc, the department of labor says. But this is a secondary consid-

{ i ° eration. {

The. military is to blame, if you | The boys who are fighting the: Nazis in Europe and the Japs-in the‘ Pacific require an enormous quantity of duck for tents and tarpaulins. - They also are burning up numbers of heavy-duty tires yse cord made in competition that duck.

vast 1 that | with |

” » ” 1 BY RUNNING the looms 18 hours a day, the WPB has kept a| reasonable supply of tires going to| the war fronts and has supplied about 80 per cent of the vital military need’ for duck. Half again as much fabric could be made—satisfying military ‘'demand and leaving enough for work gloves. and clothing—if there were trained help to operate the mills a third. shift. Since such ‘help isn't available, | the supply of denim for work cloth- | ing is down to around half of the pre-war quantity, and there are millions more workers among who | to divide it. : | ” » ” | THE ARMY and navy last year! took ‘enough leather to make 135.000,000 pairs of civilian shoes, though the leather made nowhere near as many military shoes. Ci-! vilians got 307 million pairs, of! which 50 millions came out of car-| ryover stock. Nevertheless, the year ended with |

|itators are blamed for part” of the! more than one pair of ration- -type |

|shoes for every man, woman and child left in stock. i OPA insists there is no probabil- | ity of a shoe shortage.

A serious problem is brewing in! connection with these evacuees.

|Our advance has been so swift we

‘do not have the army personnel to|

gather them together in camps.. Gen. Patch said he believes there | |are more than 100,000 Russians, |French and Poles moving through| the German countryside The |

» ” - THE JGERMANS , Jhere appear to | dp Senet Ce Tae {them.” They obey every arder to the letter.. 2

| | |

ie fully as well off—if not betier—-| France from this area alone. [tide is swelling daily. The Germans obviously are more | | frightened by these foreigners than | ‘they . are by our troops—who, in| |fact, are not frightesiing to them | at all. |

Wage Board t Due for Hike

In Salaries

By FRED W. PERKINS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, April 6.—Four of the war labor board's public members, who assist in maintaining the wartime wage freeze under the Little Steel Formula, are entitled today to 11 per cent increases in their salaries. This is a corollary result from an executive order in which President Roosevelt directed yesterday that herdceforth there shall be eight instead of four public members ‘of the board, and revoked a previous authorization for appointment of altérnate public members. The four alternate public members, whose salaries have - been $9000 a year each, thus become full or regular public members,

- whose salaries have been fixed

at $10,000. #8 = BOARD SPOKESMEN said the salary question was not the reason for the change being recommended to the White House, and that the object was to place all public members on thé same footing. The four former alternates thus given another stripe are Lewis M. Gill, former chairman of the Cleveland regional WLB; Dexter M. Keezer, former president of Reed college: Edwin E. Witte, professor of economics in the University of Wisconsin, and Nathan “P. Feinsinger,* law professor in the University of Wisconsin, , They join, as public members, Chairman George W. Taylor, professor of economics in the Univer sity of Pennsylvania; Vice Chairman Lloyd K. Garrison, dean of the University of Wisconsin law school, and Frank P. Graham, president of the University of North Carolina. There is one vacancy, resulting from the recent naming of former Chairman William H. Davis to director of economic stabilization. 2 = =” "THE PRESIDENT’S order stipulated that not more than four of the public members shall vote on any one issue. Thus the mechanism of the board will not be disturbed. - It operates with equal representation from the public, labor and employer’ meme bers—in the Syportunt cases four ?

public members will not bring the

BT Lh ver gory 3 D. |

no exaggeration; Judging from a letter written by| | slipped out of uniform during -the

I am same action in the case of the

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hw eld ok Science

caped injury until -he btoke his wrist “playing football. He was sent home to recuperate. While* here, he was Furt in an auto accident. And then, Tuesday’ night, he happened to get in the line of fire of police shooting at a young theft suspect in a 90-mile- -anhour chase. He copld hear the bullets whistling past him, Just like the battle ‘front, he decided.

These Changeable Women

A MYSTIFIED reader phoned yesterday afternoon to inquire “how come?” Both The Times and the News carried pictures yesterday of Tillie Kage]:Jar-

. dina, the star bowler. What mystified this reader—

and probably some others—was that The Times showed Mrs. Jardina as an attractive brunette, while

BUTADIENE AND STYRENE, now going into synthetic rubber, will find a wide variety of other uses in the post-war’ world, according to Dr. R. L. Bateman of the Carbide & Carbon Chemicals Corp. Plastic films that will not stiffen” with age, belts

and suspenders that will stay pliable in cold weather, and lacquers that will be more permanently nonbrittle are among the products he envisioned in an address before the Toledo (0. section of the American Chemical society. As is well known, the GR-S rubber now being manufactured under the government rubber program , is a so-called cd-pdlymer made by linking or polymerizing molecules of styrene with a much greater number of molecules of butadiene. Dr. Bateman believes that, a great many other

#lastomers or elastic substance, some of them plastics

rather than synthetic rubber, can be made from butadiene. The same thing is also true of styrene. In addition, it is important to realize that for many years, a plastic known as polystyrene has been made by polymerizing molecules of styrene with each

$700,000,000 Invested

THESE FACTS are of particular interest in, view of the discussion now going on as to what the nation should eventually do with its synthetic rubber facilities, As is well known, the United States now has about $700,000,000 invested in plant facilities of all

My Day

City was on time. We hurriedly left our bags at the apartment and went to dine with friends before ging

~ to Carnegie hall to see the dance and music festival

. BU 613 by he African Academy of Arts and Research. language

T. 5 Edwin A. Hendrickson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Hendrickson. who's with .Gen. Patton’s 3d army, writes: man girls also are in the front lines. We have captured a great many of them.” .

. barber shop in the hotel basement. She discovered-a | -picture of her son, S. 1-¢ William J. Canipbell (wear-

ing-a diver’s helmet) and she devoted the rest of the|-

day to buying up every available copy. . The Esquire theater has a classic double feature starting | tomorrow; “Remember the Might Up In Mabel’s Room.”

~~ By Dvid-Distc

types for the manutacture of synthetic rubber. The great bulk of this investment is for GR-S rubber and. includes chiefly plants for the production of butadiene, styrene and the co-polymerization of the two into GR-S rubber, These plants are capable of producing enough GR-S rubber today to meet the nation’s demands, but it is felt that with the return of natural rubber to the market the demand for synthetic rubber will fall.

Estimates Post-War Demand * DR: R. P. DINSMORE, vice president of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. recently expressed the feeling that about four years after the end of the war with Japan the demand for synthetic rubber in this country would level off at a point between. 300,000 and 500,000 tons a year. This would mean that only about half of the nation’s present capacity for the production of GR-S rubber would be needed. He suggested that the excess capacity for the polymerization of GR-S rubber be turned over to the manufacture of vinyl chloride polymers and co-polymers. Between 60,000 and 75,000 tons of these materials are now being produced per year and they are finding many uses in the war for packaging purposes either

as self-supporting films or coatings on paper or fabric. Dr. Dinsmore visualizes an expanding market

for them in the post-war world. Such a switch in the program as he suggests

would mean that we would have more plants for the production of butadiene and styrene than were re-

quired. However, Dr. Bateman's suggestions indi-

cate that this capacity likewise can be -turned to

other useful Purposes in the post-war world.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

devled to, the sam dens of one world of freedom 10

and unity.”

Technician Hendrickson, | “The Ger-

. In case any of you wondered ‘at the shortage of copies of The Times in bristling with chrome fittings.

the vicinity of the Hotel Severin yesterday, you can | blame Mrs. Naomi Campbell, manicurist in Fuller's Or electric irons, or in fact every-

'|the Peat] Harbor |

stores here and on German trucks, automobiles, found everything farm implements and tractors. . from portable = = = | Mr. Taylor dios to immense| pup PEOPLE are clean, well-| | supersets, smothered in gadgets and| thed and undeniably healthy. | | There is a small children’s fair in the park along the river and the|

{children are everywhere, pink-| | thing from a THERE, Jy 12 Pe emia and ruddy. ied electric stove or a washing machine. mwas 15” no malnutrition to be|

ea . | seen. Anyone who clainis:we have THE COMMON comment among starved the German children cer: {our equally surprised G. I's is that tainly would have to prove it to me every time they turn around theyior to anyone else who has seen|

You can get electric refrigerators

retreat and been ‘given civilian |

| clothes. “Any number of them look as good as the prisoners we are taking look bad,” Gen. Devers remarked. . = o n MIXED with them, but now chiefly on the roads, are what -our|

| soldiers call “the Okies’—the Rus-|

sian, French, Italian, Polish--and even Mongolian men and women— brought here -as slave labor, and| now released by the American | armies.

bombers can operate” ror oH shuttle run - to -the mainland,” couple of hours’ flight. Thus, an extra bombing arm can be brought to bear, in additiop to Superforts, flying out ofthe Marianas, and Liberators, capable of attacking -Japan-- from recently captured Iwo Jima. Naha, incidentally, is as far as staging base for troops and planes. 3. It is close to Japan. From Naha, its capital city, to Kageshima, the distance from Berlin to Juneau, Alaska. We have come a long way since Dec. 7, 1941, when Pearl Harbor was our nearest bombing base to Japan. Much labor and material must be poured in, of course, before the island commander's vision-eof-& remodeled Okinawa becomes a powerful reality. Here are some ‘of the| tasks on his list: ONE: Dredging of and pier construction ¢n Nakagusuku bay, the superior anchorage on the east coast, and on Chimu bay, her sis-| ter anchorage on the north side of the west coast.

“By WILLIAM McGAFFIN Times Foreign Correspondent WITH THE U., 8S. 10TH ARMY ON OKINAWA, April 6—The general, who will command this island after its capture has been completed, is looking _ ahead to the time when it will be

of the Western Pacific — a more potent advance {§ base even than i Guam, Among its as~sets, according to g@& his view, are: 1. It has a good fleet anchorage— one of those considered among the finest in the far east. 2. It has plenty of room in its 485-square-mile area for use as a capital of Kyushu, southernmost of the Japanese mainland chain, is only as far as the distance from Chicago to Kansas City, Medium

YOUR G.I. RIGHTS . . . By Douglas Larsen

Mr. McGaffin

Individual Attention Given Vets' Rehabilitation Cases

WASHINGTON, April 6. — "The O—Tuition, books, supplies and army is doing a very extensive job|equipment will be provided at gov-. of disabled men how to get|ernment expense. During training, 0 d earn a living after they|if your pension is less that $92 a

month it will be increased to that ||

Okinawa ls Most Strategic Among. Jap Islands

OG RNG open or ORI wa'S a |airfields into longer, : sturdier air-! dromes. THREE: Transformation. of the| present “excellent network of poor

roads” into several ‘hundred miles |

of two-lane, modern, coral highways

| left the room. i | Between the time she knew her ‘house was to be requisitioned and |

writing this in a house | commandeered as a command post. The woman who owns it has just]

a few hours later when a -general| moved in, she and her neighbors] scrubbed the place from top. to. bot - tom, made - new curtains for the (living room and. went through all the motions of great solicitude for the American general's care. How

much of it was honest is hard to!

say.

| But in any event the Germans . are clearly organizing sympathy-for - themselves: “Wihtile doing 50, Donel...

Loe OT SENG MINE that he or she.

| was ever a Nazi. Apparently Hitler

(was the only Nazi in Germany.

” » »

|

|such’ as the Schloss hotel on’ the

i

labor and employer members, a board spokesman said. These representatives, who are in three classes, including alternates and substitutes in addition to the designated labor and employer . members, receive $25 a day when

FS they serve.

|

| THE FAMOUS resort hotels— |

lo an here—have been convert- |

so that approaches can—bes made]

on the island, at present a physical | impossibility.

FOUR: Hospitals for navy and|™

army personnel and Okinawa civilians.

FIVE: A health program for ci-| vilians, who fortunately are proving to be friendly, and a general| effort to improve island sanitation. | Okinawa, 60 miles in length and three to 10 miles wide, is more than | twice the size of Guam; and it has] a better climate. At present what construction is being done is exclusively for tactical purposes. But island commander i with complete plans when his marines and doughboys finish occupy-| ing the ground.

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Dally News, Inc,

» HANNAH

lin Heidelberg and in nearly all the| ike major hotels in central Ger-| any. | * Unlike the private homes. state institutions, hospitals, post= offices and police stations are not | well- -kept. There is no apparent {shortage of hospital supplies. But, |according to men in the American medical corps, there has been a (great deterioration in German sur-

{gical methods under Nazi training.

” ” » | THE STARVATION diet given | American prisoners in at least some hospitals has been absolutely au|thenticated. The diet given our {men was on a caloric basis of only! {half enough to sustain life.

Whether * such treatment was al.

| widespread policy remains to be {learned. This particular instance is | insufficient to establish that. But | the doctor in charge of gne hospital | here seems to have practiced his | own special cruelties on our men.

(Copyright, 1945 Scripps-Howard Newspapers)

PENALTY CLAUSES

The six-six-six -penalty clauses of the employment security act became effective April 1. Everett TL. Gardner, director of the employment security division, announced yésterday that these penalties affect only workers who leave work without good cause, are discharged for misconduct or refuse a suitable job. These individuals will be ineligible for benefits for six weeks in addition to the waiting period week, will incur a reduction of six times the weekly benefit amount, and will

| remain liable for these disqualifica-

tions if filing a claim for unemployment compensation within six

MUNCIE LINE ADDS TRUCK MUNCIE, Ind., April 6.—The Mc-

ARE NOW EFFECTIVE

the |’

‘We, the Women Child-Raising Is Full-Time Career. Ales;

By RUTH MILLETT A BRIGHT young college graduate, considered something of a mathematical wizard by her engineering professors and new employers, said in a New York newspaper interview: “A home and a _ ’ husband and children of my own need “not interfere with my career.” That bright eyed, ingenious statement doesn’t reflect E on the 19-year-old girl’s intel-, ligence— which has already been proved— but Jo on her lack of experience. It is true that a woman, if she is ambitious enough, can keep her home, her husband and even her children from interfering with her career.

» » ” MODERN invention has done a lot to ease the housewife’s burdens and to make it possible for her to run a house and hold down a job without too much strain. But it has provided no easy method for bringing up children —or no proper substitute for a mother, When a woman does seek a substitute for her job of motherhood so that she can devote her full time to a career, her children usually suffer for it. » » # BUT BRIGHT - EYED college girls can’t see that. They know they have the brains for a career and their education makes them ambitious for one. With their youth and energy, it is easy for them to reason that » home and a husband and chil+ dren of their own need not interfere with thelr careers.

The difficulties don't arise until they get the home and the husband and the children and then

Se

try combining them with a job