Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1945 — Page 16
te ; : ; | : - The Indianapolis . © PAGE 16 ~ Thursday, April 19, 1945 ROY W. HOWARD WALTER 4ECKRONE
-
LE a
’
President Editor
Business Manage
{A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
Owned and published - daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Pubishing Co. 214 W. Maryland st. Postal Zone 9.
. + «Member of United Press,
Scripps-Howard Newspa~ . per Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of Circulations.
or
RECIPROCAL TRADE
«Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy; deliv-
ered by: carrier, 20 cents |
a week.
Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a month.
Pcnirrs ~wowanpl] “oe © RILEY 5551 Give Light and the Pgople Will Find Their Own Way
O our way of thinking, the proposal-to- breaden-and extend the reciprocal trade agreements law presents a crucial test of America’s policy of international co-operation. We are glad, therefore, that President Truman has heen quick and emphatic in giving this measure his wholehearted support. Not that we expected less. As a senator,
Mr. Truman always supported reciprocal trade.
But his
readiness in using his‘ greater influence as President to
push the program forward is something to applaud.
It
shows that Mr, Truman is putting important policies first. +» If we are not ready to trade with the rest of the world on a iarge-volume basis, then all the lip service we're giving
to political co-operation for peace will prove to be just so | There can be ne lasting peace without |
much hollow noise. economic stability. ‘And there
can be no stability without
a free flow of commerce—give and take, buy and sell.
u ” Ld
THE END of the war will unloose a tremendous de- | “mand for American products. purchases abroad, there will be large balances of dollars | and gold to pay for those first orders. continue to sell in volume, we shall fave to buy more. If |
un n ~ Because of our large war
But if we want to
we expect ever to be repaid on those billions of loans planned through the Bretton Woods institution and other agencies,
we'll have to open up our markets
countries,
to~the borrowing
A resounding vote in congress extending the reciprocal
trade law will mean more to the visiting delegates at San | Francisco than all the pretty
neighborly love.
speeches about peace and
AND BRETTON WOODS
YING in with the broadening of international trade |
agreements comes naturally Bretton Woods. #inance
has been called the hand-maiden of trade.
Bretton Woods
deals strictly with the money phases. A First, through the
bank. Second, the fund.
The purpose of the bank is to make loans for .reconstruction of a war-shattered world. ! The purpose of the fund is to stabilize the currency
of that same world—to fend
oft violent and dangerous
fluctuations of exchange, and in that way to aid the recon-
struetion. ” 2 o
” s Il' IS EASIER to understand a bank than bank lean if soundly made is repaid.
» a fund. A A transaction in
exchange stabilization may very likely turn into an expense —yet an expense will be justified if it accomplishes its purpose of sustaining orderly trade. So the committee for economic development, made up of a highly respected and representative group of experts, proposes a clarification against which we think there should
be no objection.
4 > Times
HENRY W. MANZ |
REFLECTIONS—
Ernie Pyle By John W. Hillman
IT 18 the little deeds of kindness that make a man great. And
| #9 it is those simple things—the gen--
erous- gesture, the act of thought-
| favor—that his friends remember when he is gone. Ernie Pfle was one of the kindest men alive. "He
gratitude and friendship. It might be the girl at | the cigaret counter, staring wide-eyed and gasping, ‘Aren't you Ernie Pyle?"”, as she asked for, and got, a treasured.autograph. Or it might be an old friend in difficulties who found that, in some mysterious and hidden way, his -way had been made edsier. Or it might be someone whonr™ Ernie met in his travels about, the country who said, “When you are in New York, I wish you would do something for me.” Or the G.I. overseas who asked, “If you get home, will you call my folks?" doing things for others, Mostly, too, he did’ things that he did not have to do, things that would never have occurred to a lesser man. . I found that true on his visit to Indianapolis last September. At that time I wrote a column about Ernje, attempting to tell how he felt about the war and why he felt that he had to leave the dark and bloody ground of Europe for a while.
‘It Was Like Him to Think of Things'
AS HE boarded a plane for Albuquerque, Lou Young handed Ernie a copy of the paper. Two hours later, there was a telegram on my desk: “Thanks for a beautiful and understanding piece. Ernie Pyle.” Ernie had left the plane at Kansas City to send that wire to one who was almost a stranger. And no praise ever meant more. Ernie did not need to send that wire, yet it was like him to think of things. | And I wonder how many thousands of others are | remembering Ernie today for similar words of encouragement and for other simple acts of kindness. Or who remember him for the quality I tried to { | |
express: “They say Ernie is shy, but when you meet him you understand why millions of people feel they have known him all their life. He looks at you, and you have the impression that he has seen clear down inside. And you feel his sincerity, and his quiet charm.” . . You did not have to meet Ernie face to face to | feel that charm, and that is why all over America eves are dim and hearts-are heavy. Ernie's writing somehow reached you. It was a bond that linked you to him. Not only his werds, those beautiful, simple, expressive words, but Ernie himself became a part of vou, an old and intimate friend. There was the reader who wrote us, many months ago, “I am an old woman, but every night I pray for Ernie.” And there must be uncounted others, particularly here in Indiana where Ernie was truly one of our own.
'A Laughter That Warmed"
IT WAS NOT his words alone, it was Ernie himself that inspired this feeling. For he had the eye of an artist, and when he looked at that which to others might seem commonplace, he saw the moving, beautiful things, the real and the fundamental. More than any other writer of our time, he sensed the common denominator of humanity, the dignity and nobility of everyday folk. _ And he had a priceless gift of humor—and that, | like all other things about Ernie, was kindly. It was a laughter that warmed, not a laughter that hurt. It was mostly, too, laughter at himself. For Ernie could not take himself seriously. Pride was not in him, nor vanity. Even when he became so famous that crowds grew wherever he went, he still remained a farm boy from Dana, Ind., bashful, But with a Hoosier’'s gift for liking people and seeing the best in them. It is to Ernie's credit, too, that his talents were, in part, acquired. He taught himself to write well, as anyone must. and knew his trade, but he was great because he was, earnestly and honestly and sincerely, Ernie Pyle. And it was part of Ernie to do the hard things. Like
! living in foxholes when he eould have spun out dis- | { patches from the comparative comfort of a .staff
; » } | : : : : 3 It seeks meiely to assure that the bank functions as | headquarters behind the lines. Like being honest
about himself.
fulness and the impulsive, unasked
travelled far, and wherever he went he left a trail of’
Ernie—went to -endless trouble
He was good because he worked hard |
ALY “5 »
‘Hoosier
|“A MARTYR TO HUMANITY” |
| By Mary O’'Cannell, Indianapolis tL People have been heckling me]
| considerably the past couple of days | | because of my letter in the Forum! | April 16, which placed Ernig Pyle | {in the same class as Washington, | {Lincoln and Roosevelt, Well, I'm| | glad I did it, especially now. | Not that Ernie was the brilliant!
| | statesman and national leader that { the other three were, but there are | many ways a man can be “great” | |and in his own way Ernie reached | the top. With his ability to creep! linto your heart and stay there, his capacity for warm friendliness and |
|
| humor, his deep compassion for the { underdog, his sihcere and honest [interest in the common, ordinary iman—which, after all, is what most tof us are. {from our own boys for a while, we {could read his column and feel! | comforted, knowing that - there] were men like him out there with | them, willing to listen to their woes. land gripes and ready with a cheery
cently in the Forum, When we didn't hear PY 8 noon-time shopping housewife iL good judgment to take a child and the other by a waitress, both!in a tavern. refuting my survey of the noon-time restaurant | congestion.
“l wh
Forum death
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 words. Letters must be signed. Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no way implies agreement with those opinions hy The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
“I BELIEVE MY
| THESIS STILL STANDS By Mary Studebaker, 1811 N. Meridian st.'
Two articles have appeared re-
one written article concerning a
Both letters strayed .onsigerably
Off the track. The shopping house- child.
you say, but will defend to the
olly disagree with what
your right to say it.”
“DOES THE | TRUTH HURT?”
[By Afother War Wife and Mother, Indianapolis
This is in answer to a “War Wife (and Mother.” I have read with] linterest all three of your letters to the Hoosier Forum and your last |one, “My Mother Accompanies| {Me,” of April 14, makes me wonder | o you read your first letter your-| self.
Pirst, I have never yet heard of | a church that would ask you not to | bring your children. Every church | I have been to or ever heard about | have all encouraged parents wl bring their children. And have special classes for children. And second, I have never thought |
And as for your judg- | ment, I'm glad it's not mine, be-| jcause. I've never seen a tavern that
Thas a proper atmosphere for a smail | , | Operation by the United States. tame people who have
| the control of an anti-New Deal coalition of southern
"as “a rubber stamp congress”
| ARH By
POLITICAL SGENE—
Transition By Thomas L,, Stokes
WASHINGTON, April 19.—It 1s
quite a sharp transition to be’ a whisked by air in 48 hours from Jae Southern - Italy, where as every- J or Geof where else in Europe you look from } Prima airplane or car to se¢ wreckage and ruin, batk «to i this country, back home; ‘where nothing like that CANTERE mars the landscape that passes below in flying fro 19 tr PY, New York here, former niche Everything was quite a transition, too, to eom § thee 0 back to a country where Franklin D. Roosevelt we 4 catlisiral to no longer President, to find this city in the hect ‘ bishop of C stir of a new administration, with a new Pres ¢ of all Engla dent, especially for one so long accustomed to the f Three tho old familiar ways and the familiar faces in th tite. derbyiion Sade Places: in practice & High offici
‘Unreal Quality of a Dream’
THE MIND gets in a rut, too. "The feeling ale ready present that you had been away for years,
filed into the procession be For the first
caused by the dizzy impact of the new impressions cluded Ame in- five weeks in the strange surroundings of “war, chaplains, is intensified by the change that happened so quickly Fewer thai here, so that it-all has the hazy, unreal quality of the ancient a dream despite the familiarity of the home scene, miraculously » It was encouraging to find the: country rising devastated a up so earnestly and wholeheartedly behind the figure M: catapulted so suddenly to leadership, for pulling to- Of that nu gether is going to be needed in the days ahead to ally could st win the peace and restore the country in the poste i Bh by ti war period to a stable economy with jobs enough his atin for everybody. St. Augustil But there was one impression that stirred une ale pleasantly, not for what it is im actuality, but for Kin nd what it might portend. This came from the fine, beth ge no easy flow of talk about “co-operation between the ohn son, des President and congress,” and requires some explanae hy 189 beca tion. ! That, in its best sense, is a fine thing and some complication:
-, tertaining ro The governr however, by All: churcl Anglican cht filiated wert three-hour c Bishop W Massachuset! Protestant E United Stat Bromley Oxi of the Amer pal church 1 Council of America. Di president of The thron been brought! proof hiding
BOOGIE (CANT
thing very much needed. But that phrase ‘“cooperation between the President and congress” has. come, in recent ‘years, to have a different confiota= tion in some quarters,
'Not Talking of a Working Co-operation
IT BECAME the slogan of those who fought the New Deal and President Roosevelt, who wanted cone gress to- dominate rather than the President, They were not talking of a working partnership, the coe operation they meant—and still mean—is CO-operae tion by the President with congress, ~ They want congress dominant because congress in the last few years has been pretty much under
conservative Democrats” and Republicans who have been .whittiing away at the New Deal at ‘every opportunity, That made congress “an independent body,” a respectable body, though before that when congress was going along with President Roosevelt in creation of the New Deal those same people derided it
It is well to be suspicious and watchful of such. people talking about “co-operation.” They are hopeful that the conservatives may now move in and
take President Truman into the so-called “co-opera- The Bdceie tion” because the new President comes from cone will hold a gress and served there for some time. new location They may be disappointed. ‘in. the M ' . . . cWrch from Stands by the Social Objectives’ mogrow. PRESIDENT TRUMAN was emphatically plain * Recently e | In his message to congress that he stands by the Raymond 1 social objectives of the Roosevelt administration Smock, vice and that he intends to serve, as it did, the welfare stone, recor
of the comuon people. In his first press conference, from which he emerged with a new decisiveness that struck news
Anderson, . co Melvin Zinn Stikeleater, s
paper - correspondents who had known the rather Members o genial gentleman about the senate, he was also very the Rev, Ral] clear and explicit in backing up the Bretton Woods Memorial Pre agrecments for an international bank and stabiliza- Lorene Gard Uon fund, as submitted by the late President, Pohlmann, n and for the reciprocal tariff bill, also as submitted board; Mrs. by Mr. Roosevelt. There are interests, both in and Mrs. P. L. Se out. of congress, which are trying to scuttle both P-T. A. of s
these measures so essential to full international co They include the
Mrs, William Woodruff, pe
: : . Like going back to the wars, when he interded and the fund likewise; that the two. not be | Knew, deep down id oh price would be h ’ ’ .
scrambled. - . . * ites should be trule-Isams™” savs the CED. “Curreriasy Something Fine Has Gone’ eid oans should be Lruiyoans,” says the LED. "Lurrency |. soMETHING FINE has ‘gone out of our lives,
transactions should be currency transactions. And gifts | something beautiful and inspiring — something ir-
wife complained that she was en-| Certainly your mother would be their particular meaning for tire in the right in having her| > shopping snack during the peak rush | ’ y 18 vet too early to tell how far the new Presi. hotr and resting her tired shop- | When you have a small child with | dent will 80, beyond his indorsement, to fight for | ping feet, and being annoyed by | vou. -* y | these Ineasures, and’ for others. Sa That is the test, and it can't be too far off,
members.
MAJOR TO
| word “or .heafty handshake. He didn’t have to be out there risking his life, but his job was—like ‘thay tof Roosevelt—to serve the people, {and ‘he is just as much a martyr
“co-operation.” a good chaperon, but not —
| Tu er iIthe business: girls who “barge in at| If you have t t ay f the | i i should be gifts. Lack of clarity will produce in the future | replaceable. In many ways, he was America’s best re gai Roses Th noon!” 4 : same oil Ey heh an 7 Pp as it has in the past misunderstanding between countries, | er rane hl | war, ie Malte ig that peo vii to a friend or if you want to| IN- WASHINGTON— ..St. Paul st, ‘ ~~ ; . | ans : ' : vt i 8 SUC § am resumably al i : i If a gift cannot be made as a gift, it should not mask behind | of the filling stations and the cross-road stores, of el Dee ha business Woman Fe down wn go someplace for something to drink, | : Som (ae ) . Ay A ities " ’ | ' | . 3 i § the facade of a loan. Tn | Sak homes ang busy flies, of Hen SAE Worhen, WA a week. The two men I've hero-|4! Noon because my lunch hour is i) Jets stones serve Sodas ond Si Quota Law ice in the En n= 2 » 2 5a ! 8 gleam a owed = ont Ne | worshipped for years. I feel saq |designaled as 12 to 1 by the boss) Teri Rn joi no gl erations. 1 r * . , | ‘ fn _ THERE'S MUCH Yankee common sense in that, which, | 7 2118 8 AE i BO (whose casualness | 30d sorta lonely, somehow. Be El ral A Be or op a er. Alon sah TL As adfuta if applied in the final drafting of the legislati au. | AUER and .play and w g g . ¥ od waitresses in favor of shopping . 'B Earl Richert group, he pa pplied 1n e final drafting-of the legislation may save |;loaks a sense of decency, and honor, and reverence, | drink your beer at home if you can't| y
the world from the over-simplifieation about debts which |
after the last war caused so much grief at home and abroad
and contributed so much to the building up of world war II. |
The over-simplification was ex
pressed by a Yankee who |
missed out on his usual common sense when hé (Calvin | Coolidge) said: “They hired the money, didn't they ?” Attributed to the late Frank Vanderlip, famous finan-
cier. is this: question goes crazy.” But if any clarification is much elarity is indicated in
change proposed by the CED,
“Anyone who tries to understand the money |
| And
but significant
possible let's have it. the simple
No proponent of the proposal can object to any modifymg language whose only- purpose is to assure the public
that the labeling is honest. which is backed by ‘good faith,
The time to clarify a contract,
is before it is signed.
NEW LOAN ADMINISTRATOR PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S first important appointment— John W, Snyder of St. Louis to the post of federal loan' administrator—looks like a good one. He is a banker of wide experience and high standing,
chosen for a banker's job. years .on the government side
of the RFC—which gives him diate responsibilities. 4
There's plenty of room for him to apply that liquidating experience to the. multi-billion RFC
His background includes’ 10 of banking—seven years as a liquidator of insolvent banks,
three vears as an official familiarity with his imme-
: ca: ard and its subsidiaries. |
We think the selection of Mr. Snyder as head of the federal loan agency a fortunate choice, but repeat what we said When Jesse Jones and Fred Vinson held that office——it's
‘too big a’ job for any one man, and its free-lending, free- |
spending powers should be curbed by congress.
LEARNING STILL TAKES
TIME
and a sure sense of right. It is hard to write words about Ernie, for the words seem to belong to him and no other could use them as he did. | And now those words are ended, gone like so many other precious things in a world of death—senseless, unreasonable death. Ernie Pyle is dead, though what he was will live on in the hearts of his friends, though the best of what he has wriiten will endure as a heritage of our English tongue. He has gone to some far, green hill, quiet after baftle, there ta join Capt. Waskow and Ray Clapper and all the nameless others whoffi Ernie knew so well—men who gave their lives that such things might not be again. > We must never forget them.
WORLD AFFAIRS—
Vital Bases By Marshall ‘McNeil
WASHINGTON, April 19.—The United States must keep all Japanese Pacific islands necessary to our defense, and our possession of them should be undivided, Rep. Albert Thomas (D. Tex.) told the house yesterday. He was speaking in behalf of the immense navy supply bill, which he helped prepare as ranking majority member of the navy appropriations sub-com-
mittee
Thomas explained that after hearing most of the | con-
top-flight naval officers, the committee had cluded that “one of the most important problems
confronting this country is what disposition is to be |’
made of the Pacific bases which we have captured from the Japs, and those we inténd to capture in a few months.” w 'Nation Will Be in Jeopardy’ “WITHOUT THESE bases under our dotnination, this nation will be ii jeopardy,” he said. “Surely our
because they are not close to their homelands. The
allies will not want a part in the possession of them, |.
| “HOW WRONG | | WE WERE” | By James E. Morris, 320 N. Hamilton om Why should we stick so close to | the rules of the Geneva convention? | Because we thought the Germans | would likewise abide by them. How wrong we were. Our men-in Nazi concentration camps who have recently ‘been liberated, and photographed; are examples of flow the | Germans follow the rules of the convention. The pictures showed what resemhled a .skeleton more than a man. These men were starved and lived in unsanitary conditions. Of course, we in this country must play the perfect host, and when this war is over, we will send { their men back fat. sassy and Nazi. { They will send ours back, yes, you know it, The living dead.
housepives because a person like I am is “awful mean to the waitresses!” These two letters avoided the matters - discussed in the factual survey I discussed in my. article. No one could possibly back the shopping housewife in her contention that her tired feet- need to rest during the rush hour and that rest is of .more importance than business people who merely need to éat during the rush hour. And the waitress is manifesting a subconscious- resentment against some business woman‘ because of something personal which happened once upon - a time. .She doesn’t know me and therefore has no basis on which to charge me witn mean treatment of her and her co~ workers. I believe my thesis still stands: That the noon hour bottleneck is caused by the shopping housewife,
Side Glances—By G I
|
albraith
live without it. True, passing a law would not improve the cleanliness of same of ‘the poor little children that are left to run the streets, but taking children into taverns doesn’t make them any better, even if their bodies and| clothes are clean. I'm not a stuffy old maid. who wouldn't take a ,drink or go to a| tavern. I'm 23, married to a sailor who has been in Australia for 15) months, I have a 10-months-old | baby girl, and I'd never think of! taking her tw a tavern now or] even if she was 2 or 3 years old. When she gees in a tavern she will| be of age and escorted by either her parents or a male friend of her own age, I have been to taverns many times before and since I've been| married, but I haven't been in one| since I was with my husband just| before he went overseas. - And I can wait until he comes home to go with me the next time I do} enter one. | My husband wants me to have a good time, too, but I find enjoyment in taking the baby for a walk, visiting my friends and stopping for a soda on the ‘way home. My mother is also my chaperon, and I never go any place without my child, even to taking her to a show once or twice. If I have to" go some place where it Is impossible to take her, my mother takes care of her, and I get back as quick as possible. I don’t have time to get tired of four walls as I have so much to do taking care of the baby, writing my husband a daily letter, -and keeping myself up so I'll be the same person my husband left. You say you were just asking for
| |
. WASHINGTON, April 19.—Do we want to leave the Germans as the | second most favored people under our immigration laws? This and scores of other questions pertaining to post-war immigration will be studied by the house immigration committee which
l'this week begins the first exhaustive examination of
immigration problems in 20 years. Under the still effective 1924 law, 27,370 Germans (including 1413 from Austria) are entitled to enter the United States annually as compared with 2713 from Russia, 307 from Greece, 3086 from France and 6524 from Poland. (Great Britain and Northern Ireland are the most favored, with ‘a quota of 65,721, Eire's quota is 17,853.)
Favors Transferring Quota
REP. SAMUEL DICKSTEIN (D. N. Y), immigra~ tion committee chairman, says he believes the 27,000 allotted Germany should be taken away and divided among the small countries of Europe who have sufs fered under the Nazi rule. : He intends to Jdntroduce dan amendment for this purpose, making an exception, however, to permit admittance of a certain number of German refugees
| and proved anti-Nazi Germans, .
“1 feel,” he said, “that people who have been members of the Nazi party should not be permitted to enter this country for the next generation, They cannot be re-educated.” (The German quotas were filled before the ®war,
but during the war years only a handful of refugees | reached this country—2150 in 1942, 248 in 1043, 238 | in 1944 and 1600 during’ the first nine months of the |
present fiscal year.)
* Rep. Dickstein said he is not in favor of changing the immigration total which is nearly 154,000 annually
for all countries, , He said that the dividing of Germany's 27,000 would aid such countries as Greece where before the war the waiting list was so long it weuld take
a person virtually 80 years to get to the head of |
the list.
Prisoner Status to Be Checked
REP. DICKSTEIN says his group will check into |
=o
African, Siei
pagns. He 1
+ the distingui
two oak le European th campaign sta
%
Li
i comments; you mean agreements, . , : : ‘ “wi United States alone would be threaténed by them. ) the situation pertaining to prisoners of War. SO much has been written about the “miracles” in army “Cail it annexation or whatever you desire. But Son Y Jour You Baye hud gotier Althaugh the Geneva convertion provides for their and navy teaching of languages, that it is helpful to | this country should have sole jurisdiction. Most of sor th Lot of do) 1OWIR Yo theiy native lands. he is convinced that ) congidef comments by Dean Henry Gratts : ay the islands have little commercial use. Their use is y ' S movements are afoot to keep many o em here. ak gtonsicer nes by Dean Henry Grattan Doyle of George | [i riy militay.. I hope the state department wil Te EY ctiins people to| Hb 18 particularly suspicious of erganizations which k i Washington yniversity, nt | adopt the navy point of view. If it doesn't, I'm Wah: ig ee by Tol are soliciting funds for the ostensible purpose of The army specialized training program did teach lan | afraid it will hear from the American people Who ghee uh § vou wrote. the ® first| Americanizing these. prisoners by education, He said . guages in a hurry. # | have bought and paid for the iflands in the blood letter and your two follow-up let- | he would subpena leaders of these groups tq testify 3 i f their sons.” Aho ot before his committee, ! : : : As Dean Doyle points out, this is not a “miracle.” ; ; : 4 Pe ters of the first certainly prove that. ; Plast Sad 5 . : : . 3 During navy bill hearings, Rep. Thomas ques~ TE —————— Thi immigration committee also will study whas +» Plast Rather, it is a matter of devoting long hours under individ- | tioned “Secretary Forrestal about the islands. DAILY THOUGHT should he done’ about-the 3500000 “friendly” aliehs “ual instruction to one subject : | “Broadly speaking, I would say that the respon- A thy citi wate, and | Who, IthoUER most of them have been in tris country Gi sonditi ee fase tea blR o hte : . | sibility for the security of the Pacific ocean must rest I will lay thy eities or many years, liave Tiel-Wecome Tiaturaliged, meal. i iven conditions as favorable as those provided under | with the United States,” Secretary Forrestal said. thou shalt be desolate, and ‘thou | Many ofthese people, Rep. Dickstein said, have the ASTP, teachers in this country can do just as ‘good | “Thomas said 4f Pacific islands captured from the |: shalt know that I am the Lord.~~ | heen unable .to become citizens bensiise courts have and w a job as the id,” Day fit | 7275; were pat. under Joie Si), they mish) naves fel 85:4, "7" | disagreed*as to the interpretation of statutes. - as the army" nd navy did, . Dean Doyle says. “With | be. properly armed. In that event, he said, they Ae - | + “Something must be done to make natiralization | : Bathe Advan of ample time, small classes, inten: would be “push overs” for the Japs. f | | DNAR. in fact 1s ‘becoming con-| proceedings uniform,” he declared. =. 1 . A Wark and mechanical aids—all of which means greater | “1s there anything in that point of view?" Mr. | |temptible, and ought to be put down| Other problems to be considered are the enemy | ih Yon | provide. ‘near miracles’. in “pos Thomas Rsv Shs sees Ty anes Souls by the great nations of Europe, just| aliens and the 900-odd refugees who were admitted to By ts
