Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1945 — Page 14
he Indianapolis’ “Tifnes “PAGE 12: Wednesday, May 2, 1945 ROY W. HOWARD ' WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ
President Editor Business Manager RNR (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) So ®
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DEFEAT UNEMPLOY MENT, TOO GREAT many workers share iT fear, expressed at the White, House Monday by President Green of the
my )
RILEY 5551
American Federation of Labor, that wide-spread une mploy- 4%
ment in this country will follow Germany's collapse. Whatever its extent, we agree with Mr. Green that most of this unemployment will—at least, ¢ an—be tempo- | * yary. There is nolack of work that needs doing, what with the war against Japan still to be won and a huge pent-up demand for civilian goods crying to be satisfied, The shift to a one-front war will involve tough problems. Sharp cuts in some munitions programs; sharp increases. in others. Many war plants laying off workers; others striving to hold or enlarge present forces. Areas.| of manpower shortage as well as of unemployment. A | scrambled picture: : But competence in gov ernment and industry can sqve | these problems - .and—while maintaining early defeat of | Japan as the paramount objective—can make the period “of one-front war a period of victory over unemployment and inflation here at home. ” o » 3 ” ” o WE LIKE the way the war production hoard, under | Chairman Krug, is proceeding. Without waiting for a formal proclamation of .V-E day, this agency is removing or relaxing its control over industry and materials, and clearing the road.for the promptest possible resumption of civilian-goods production on the largest possible scale. The army and .navy also are showing an encouraging tendency to consider welfare of the home front as well as military needs. evidence of official desire to protect and strengthen the domestic economy. The part business and industry must play has been well stated by Paul G. Hoffman, chairman of the committee for economic development. Although actual reconversion of many industries may have to wait until men and materials can be spared from the war effort, Mr. Hoffman says, this is a time for every business enterprise to co-operate with the govefnment’s war agencies and to perfect its own planring for an abundance of future jobs.
T-BONE OR ‘FATBACK? R EGARDL LESS of the way the Germans or the Japs treat American prisoners of war, the United States army
will abide by the Geneva convention which prescribes rules |
for such treatment. Brig. Gen. R. W. Berry, deputy assistant chief of staff, SO asserts hefore the house military affairs committee. He points out that the Geneva convention is written info. our law; that it is not a question. of army policy; that so long as congress doesn’t change the. law, the army “will enforce it as it stands. That, we think, is sound doctrine. The Geneva convention is about the only civilized thing that has Deen salvaged out of this war. If we throw it overboard in our revulsion against the Germans and the
Japs, we get down in the gutter with them. Following
which, we rev oh $0 savagery with the speed of light. # 8 " SO- MUCH. for the general principle that two wrongs don’t make a right. Geneva convention to the bill of fare?
We don’t believe thie intent of the Geneva document | calls for T-bone steaks with French fried potatoes in a | German- prisoners
six-course: oyster-to-nuts dinfier .for - "while the American house-wife is cracking her arches chasing from store to store trying to corral a mealy hot dog or a slice of spam. Despite the general's ‘contention that our Nazi war prisoners haven't been coddled, mounting evidence indicates that they have been when it comes to the menu.
The fact that the army itself in a recent ruling switched |
the, POW's bill of fare from tenderloin to fatback is indicative that Gen. Berry isn’t too sure of his position. "Our Geneva convention research department has been unable-to find anything calling for rich foods and gravies for our prisoners- while we ‘plain people” Soup-mix., ~~ It isn’t so much a matter application thereof.
subsist on
of principle.as it is of the Sdi———— i — OPEN THE NEWS CHANNELS RESIDENT TRUMAN announces he will hold one press conference a week. we suegest that he should hold them regularly, The ‘press conference is an instrument news to the public. | two & week, some of his import
for transmitting
ant subordinates in govern-
ment -have heen by-passing press conferences altogether. |
“Thus inquiries. about governmental activities have heen blocked at imporfant sources. : reporters share with. government officials tion that, in these times of war, news reports must “be weighed carefully for reasons of national security. Throughsut the war, the American préss has proved its responsibility.
sense of
In view of the newspapers’ demonstration of good*faith and of full understanding, we believe press conferences shouid be resumed by top officials. They owe it to. the American people to give out all the news that can safel ly be divulged within limits of military safety, : 4 JOE SCRAMBLES ABO ARD Shwe ita ENATOR JOE GUFFEY led a delegation of Pennsylvania Democrats to" the ‘White House —to- give President '- Trove the- first public indorsement for a second term. Mr, Truman, according to.those present, said nothing.
| the rubble of the liberated cities.
| for disease. |
And elsewhere in government there is |
But what about the ‘application of the |
| invited as
With that we find no fault, although |
Although President Roosevelt scheduled !
the realiza-:
He has |
nr REFLECTIONS Lg
Back From Bondage
By Malcolm W. Binday LE,
Editor's Note: Mr, Bingay, editorial director of the Detroit Free Press; is-one of a group-of-leading editors: now studying the Nazis’ prison camps and treatment of foreign ‘workers.
PARIS, May 2.—Millions of men, women and children are walking over the highways, of Europe, wan-
| dering seemingly, without direction, seeking the only -
ing that to them matters in life now—home—and { doubt wondering as they walk whether any such | place still exists. : | There are no statistics as to their numbers. Sta- | tistics do not matter, They are no more helpful to one's emotions than an array of figures in the World Almanac. : Just numbers; a We can see them as we fly around Europe over From where we | sit they look like so many ants. The human contact is missing. When we visited the’ great Paris railroad terminal, e.Gare Orsay, the largest of the rehabilitation sta-
{ | |
eS for: Franch’ Prisoners of war, however, the pic-
ture changed. There, amid the surging crowds and in.the rare
| glare of bright lights, the ‘wandering hordes of the
great highways became humanized for us. They were no longer statistics. They were no longer impersonal kttle dots widgling along the roads. They were men, gaunt, worn, filthy, but ‘men—human beings with the light of freedom in their eyes.-
'More Than Two Million. of Them"
- IT 1S ESTIMATED that in all there are more than two million of them—prisoners of war-—slave laborers of Hitler.
Trains run no more to this vast railroad depot— [
just human freight. About 10,000 arrive every 24 hours. They come in -great truckloads, carrying their “ baggage, whatever they have salvaged from the prison camps. They are registered, geloused, bathed, then Checked
Only the comparaively healthy come here. The stricken are rushed to hospitals as fast as they can be found. The great lobby is ablaze with blinding light. French flags are everywhere with a 40-foot-high drawing of ‘De Gaulle as the centerpiece. Around the walls are the vast signs welcoming them to the new, the great, the glorious France. Several thousand women work Yere welcoming them. French Boy Scouts carry their pitiful baggage. All are trained in the technique of greeting them. All volunteer their services with true Gallic instinct.
‘Enqulfed in Ineffable-Love' THE PRETTIER girls, or so it seemied to me, were arranged to be the first to greet them. Nurses with faces you might find painted in the Louvre take their filth-stained bodies through the processing and begin the restoration of them to human dignity. The guards do their best to keep the waiting crowds away from them so they can be registered
wild shriek and a girl or an old woman breaks through the police cordon and throws her arms
him in ecstacy: No, not statistics; no, not numbers, not ants along the road, but human beings bes engulfed in ineffable love. As these men are regishaton, a Joudspeaker in front | of the station blares forth their names to the. wait- | ing crowds. The cries of joy as each name is barked | brings out a refrain which in crescendo sounds like
| célestial music: Perhaps it is, for if is from the heart.
'Hoping Against Lost Hope'
LOOKING AT those faces peering over that fence is a sight that will haunt me as long as-I live. The light in their eyes as each truck is unloaded,
through the archway and a beloved name has ngs been called. Then the hope surging forth again as a new load arrives will stay with me always. -Some stay on-for nights and days hoping against lost hope. One old woman was pointed put to me, her wrinkled-face framed in a ragged shawl. Long ago she had been officially informed that _ber boy was dead. Grief has bitten into her . poor | mind ‘too deeply, however, and so she stagds through
2 WORLD AFFAIRS—
Squabble
By Wm. Philip Simms
SAN FRANCISCO, May 2.-—-If the squabble over: Argentina and Poland may be ‘taken as a sample of the way in which the new league of nations is to function, the outlook for an organization based on simple | justice is far from promising. Russia took the position that it power politics or American
was a case for international log-rolling. -The« 20 “republics, plus. a..dozen -other countries,
{ wanted Argentina seated at San Francisco. All right.
{ Argentina might Poles in Warsa
get a bid if the Moscow-sponsored w were likewise included. Against this approach there was | opposition inside the committee rooms. wanted was a complete separation of problems. Each should be considertd on. its -own merits. If Argentina had. fulfilled the conditions of United Nations membership, then she should be a matter of right. If she had not fulfilled the necessary conditions, then she should be barred | because it would be wrong to admit her.
Same Argument Applied to: Poles THE: SAME argument, was applied to the regime at Warsaw. If that regime met-the conditions laid down by the Big Three at Yalta, it should be | invited to San. Francisco automatically. Otherwise not. Neither Buenos Aires nor Warsaw, it was held, | should be admitted as the result ‘of back-room bargaining Continuing the fight, Foreign Commissar Molotov appealed first to a room packed with correspondents, then to. a plenary session of the conference. -While Argentina was-about to be seated here, He sald with stme heat, courageous Poles were being barred. What he did not say was that” the constitutional govern-
tremendous What was the two
ment of Poland-—the government which has been in |
the war against Hitler since 1939, and which has never wavered—I1s being barred by Russia alone, Nor ®d he say that all the rest of the United Nations would like nothing better than to extend tor the real Poland an invitation What M. Molotov meant by Poles” plainly was the Polish committée setup in Moscow and moved “into Warsaw. behind the Red army I attended M. Molotov's press conference, It was | one of the fnost remarkable I ever witnessed; With consummate skill he told his*side of the ArgentinePolish story before he repeated it at “the plenar
I'session and, at the same time, deftly colored the
opposition's case before the opposition stated it for themselves.
egan to Throw Stones.
| BUT AT ONE -voint, he went a “Attle far. Living : a glass house, -he began to throw stones. He.
and processed. Once in a while, however, there is a |
around one of the grim men just unloaded, hugging |
the | slow change of expression as the last figure disappears |
the long hours waiting, waiting, refusing to believe. |
=
H “TONE IS DISTINCILY ENCOURAGING” By J..T., Reports from Washington say! that President Truman talked | right “on the line” to Soviet For-| | eign Minister Molotov, who “ap-| | pearea to appreciate” the vigor and positiveness with which the Pres-| ident. expounded the American | viewpoint on the Polish situation. | This is in line with reports from | | Moscow that Mr. Molotoy's superior, | Premier Stalin, enjoyed the blunt- | ness of the late Wendell Willkie and | of President “Eric Johnston cf the | U. S. Chamber of Commerce when | {those gentlemen visited his capital. | | And these reports might be an object lesson to a perhaps small] but very vocal segment of our pub-
Indianapolis
{lic, which appears to feel that Mar-
| shal Stalin is so sensitive, or petty, that he cannot 'endure frankness| or friendly disagreement ,on any point. Certain publicis’s seex to create an impression that the “United States and Great Britain have only | { two opt jons—either to “yes” Moscow | Islay ishly ‘on everything, however | violently it may - offend - against tevery democratic. instinct, or: to [Tight the Soviet. Co-operation with Russia, these soff-soapers feel, can be had only at the price of letting the Kremlin run the show, That, in my opinion, is poppycdck. | Neither Stalin nor his associates are that petty. “They. are, properly, [doing their best to advance what {they consider Russia's long-term interests— just as Churchill is Britain’s and- we trust Truman will this country’s. | But Stalin is a prime vealist. He knows that his Russian interests and our American intefests do not always coincide. He will press his full claims as far as "he can hope to make them stick. But he, no more then we, wants to go to war over anything short of the unavoidable. ‘And, if it 4s his friendship and admiration ‘we seek, we_ will “get them more quickly by standing up for-our-own-interests;and principles than by cheap boot-licking. The Communist regime has- felt, understandably, that every man’s hand was against it. Moscow was courteously sold down the river long enough so that we can not expect to kid Stalin by pulling our punches | What Moscow wants, Stalin de-! mands What Moscow dislikes, ! wholly-controlled Soviet journals condemn bitterly and sometimes violently. Stalin does not assume that the price of co- operation must
EE wt frm
“Side Glances—By G
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the
Forum death your right to say it.”
(Times readers: afe invited Beige Is to express their views in [CLEARLY THE ANSWER” these columns, religiaus con- |By Henry W. Reger, 1908 N. Talbott ave. . Yroversies excluded. Because | At this time every thinking po of the volume received, let- |son should. attempt & solution to ters should be limited to 250 |Perpetuate peace. words. Letters must be No one knows what kind of a signed. Opinions set forth {plan for world peace will come out h th f +h 4 lot the San Francisco conference, ere are those ot the writers, ut everyone must realize that anand publication in no. way | other world conflict will destroy implies agreement with those | civilization. opinions hy The Times. The It is my conviction that you can‘Times. assumes no responsi- |not outlaw war by force or means bility for the return of manu- ‘lof an international police force or scripts and cannot enter cor. |SOme, similar means. T am of the
. opinion that we must educate the respondence regarding them.) | masses for peace. We must make all mankind conscious of the urg"ent need for peace. We must educate to the folly of war. In “Addition there must be a]
be his playing Casper Milquetoast Why should we? At the San Francisco conference certain decisions must be made that
POLITICAL SCENE— -
In the Open | By Thomas L. Stokes
SAN FRANCISCO, May 2.—Russia, the untamable rowdy, with no
4 nice diplomatic manners, is serving .
a very useful purpose at this United ‘Nations conference, In her crude | and blunt fashion she has helped to wi "diplomacy | out of the closet, out of the carefully guarded private conference room, and has pitched it out into the pub= J lic hall where it can be talked about, as far a cry as {| that is from what happens in her country. Veterans of international conferences weré amazed at the spectacle of the public debate here over ade mission of Argentina to this conference. Russia pros | voked it. She insisted on airing in public her opposi- | -tion to Argentina which, aside from intrinsic merits, was part of her strategy to get Poland seated here, © Credit must go, too, to the American and British lead § ers here for co-operating in this public debate, which {| was one of the most hopeful signs at the conference, §
Fought Issue Through to the End RUSSIA LOST. She was outvoted. Her rate was to postpone the Argentine~issue for a few days, [{ That would have put the Latin-American country, | one of our satellities, in the same waiting status i Poland and would have given her a card in her une;
‘I"¢easing campaign to get Poland, her ‘satellite, ads |
mitted. She could have played one against the other, | But Argentina was seated. § Russia fought “the issue all the way through to] the end. ¢ And, in so doing, she provided a very exciting day | : and a very striking contrast to the usual formalities of international conferences. Ordinarily everything: is settled in the back room. At open sessions you only ¢ get formal ratification, cut and dried. It would haved been helpful if people all over the world could have sat in the galleries at the war memorial building here and listened to that public debate started by Russian Foreign Commissar Molotov and participated in by § representatives of several nations. It was most healthy for the future. Mr. Molotov seems to be learning a thing or two | and quick—here in San "Francisco, here in the ate’ mosphere of American free speech and an American | free press which, locally, seems to publish his picture | more than anyone. else and recites his coming and goings with such’ abandon as is not possible in pd 3 own country, §
Called a Press Conference
AFTER "HE HAD fought in vain against Atgehe tina's admission in the secret sessir:is of both the executive committee of 14 and the steering committees
comprising the heads of all delegations, he did what the American politician often does. He called a press i conference, his second since he’s been here. And is was announced to the newspaper correspondents by “Mike” MacDermott, press chief of our own state de= partment. Mr. Molotov was frank. He wanted to talk about Argentina, It was a strong ¢ case, persuasively put. He restated it later in the public session -of the | conference. -British Foreign Minister Eden sat calmly by in| his chair on the rostrum, the presiding officer, as the | debate went on before him. Great Britain has her | orbit of lesser dependencies and powers, and we have | ours in Latin America, and this had all been arranged between the two, this business of seating Argentina, in the ‘fashion of old-fashioned diplomacy, And so, : of course, does Russia have her orbit. . This is a hang-over from the old days, which’ is a discouraging side of this conference. But it is ree lieved somewhat by such things as the free-for-all |
i
Gates
involve disagreements between Russia and the Anglo-American democracies. Are those decisions to be made by conciliation and co-opera-
| tion or by unilateral action of Mos-
cow, accepted, sulkily by us? President Truman's s positive, vig-| orous conversations with Mr. Molo-
but docilely,
: : tstietiv Rei tov seta tone’ that is distinctly en | Granting that there is an in-| By Ned Brooks | stinct in man which craves com-
tbat and war, we could abate that
couraging. » 5 LJ
“NO TIME FOR HASTY ACTION”
{By The Watchman, Indianapolis
We are now living ina most fateful time. This is no time fon hasty and ill-considered action. Great decisions require deep and longconsidered reasoning, not by acceptance through fear. . Peace and unity is highly desirable, but be-~
fore we can have~<kBarmony ‘among nations, there must of necessity be willingness to compromise on tle part of all. for peace is justice and
justice, and without fair dealing for all, there will be no peace for long. Dodging or postponing decisions will not make for a successful be-
ginning for a charter of world free- |
dom. Or is this San Francisco. con~ ference committed to peace based on freedom? I'fear not. from aggression applies to all nations, large and small. allowed to dominate Poland - by force, what hope have other small nations near Russia - for freedom and justice? Either this San Francisco conference writes a bold charter of freedom, denounces and renounces aggression, pledges all members to abide by the rules, with no veto} powers, or the: whole thing will be| a hy pocritical farce.
albraith
urTER seer
better as of peoples by | debate over Argentina. all the world's people. do that, I would recommend “tne catch on in time.
[every year every college in the IN WASHING TON—
\countfy ekchange students with Pressure
with those of foreign countries. By| {this means all people would become acquainted with each other. All would work for the common welfare, |
WASHINGTON, May 2.—White by having the Olympic games every! House advisers inherited by Presiyear. We could stage international| dent Truman are bringing pressure {football games between nations, | on the new executive to replace plus hockey, boxing, wrestling, etc.| aging Brig. Gen, Frank T. Hines 48
For in that way the truth | In order to! gets out, or some of it, and maybe the people will |
That ‘would -surely consume all the| head of the veterans administration, it was learned
here.
”
Freedom |
If- Russia is]
p : . : n His silence was natural. And commendable, |.quoted the former Secretary of State” Cordell Hull
‘80 many immediate issues of war and peace to think abott | and the late President on what they had sald about that he well might wish those who profess to be his f riends |; Argentina ldst year. At that time they characterized
I! Argentina as Fascist-like and, said M. Moltov with would avoid tr ying to plunge him into the 1948 presidential | |'a touch of irony, he believed he was entitled. to campaign now. | consider these statements- “authoritative.” . .. That wouldn't occur to Joe Guffey, who has in mind. Which, of course, they ere. ‘But 30, uates trom : the past become the game here, more than one can a 1940 senatorial canipaign of his own, Nothing could | play at, it, 1t eould wreck the conference. M. Molotov Toate from riding the likeliest pair of coat- tails in sight. | himself 'is.on record as{ of prior to June 22, 1041, hat’s how he got where he i is and that 8 is 0 as blaming the present war on imperialistic, -capitalof staying there, nly Brobete istic Britain and the United States. “And he: might Ey IE a quoted on other subjects more embarrassing sll
|
|
| Ee
"No: sausage sgain foday? «| suppose the nest excuse wil be that . we have fo feed: the Germans!" :
competitive spirit {4 individuals.
Education is clearly the answer |
to perpetual peace. One has only | to leok at Germany to find what |
Choice of the Roosevelt brain-trusters for the job is Arthur J. Altmeyer; 53-year-old‘ chairman of the social security board and one: of the original New &
can be accomplished by means of | Dealers.
education, World peace will be ours|
when we educate on a world-wide| basis for peace. “ u ” » “SO WHAT ARE
The true foundation. WE TO DO?
By Mrs. R. S,, In answer to Mrs.
Indianapolis
officials realize what they are doing, or do they care? You wonder where you and others are to move {with your children. Well, OPA is just- what is making it harder all the time for folks like you. I know, I am not taking anyone else's word for it. For having a house to rent and
also looking -after my son's house while he is in the army, renting the
|houses, I've just enough to keep from losing them. The OPA has {reduced our rent below the month{ly payment on the houses, besides {the taxes and upkeep. In our house is a family with three children {under the age of six years, and in my son’s house is. a _marine's ‘wife and two small children.
So what are we to do? What can |
| we do? Let them still stay there {and both of us lose our houses, or | put them out in ninety days and {them with no place to go? The OPA | won't worry. Perhaps they have no | children. Anyway, they have a place [to go and sleep. I would like to {know just what can be done.
. n » “HE IS A SLIMY, SLIPPERY CHARACTER” By Cato, Indianapolis There have been suggestions that Herr von Papen, who went to his hunting lodge to await capture, might be used to form a post-Hitler government for the Reich. That idea . indicates either lameéntabie ignorance ‘of von Papen or a shockingly” low tdea of allied intelligehce. / Whatever his relations with Hit ler, von Papen always has been high in that Junker group thet is willing to fight a dozen wars, if necessary, to lay all Europe waste including Germany, to commit any atrocious act, Jn order that the Hun eventually may’ rule the world, He is a- slimy, slippery customer. It would be hard .to find any other German less desirable.
einen ————————————— DAILY THOUGHT
Be of'good courage, and let us behave ourselves valiantly for our people, and for the cities of our God; and let the Lord do that which is good in his sight,— I Chronicles 19:13.
WHATEVER “chince shall bein.
we will bear with equanimity.— |
Wise of Indi-! anapolis, I too wonder if the OPA|
President Roosevelt, an’ informed source disclosed, ! had decided to make a change in the top veterans post but it was not known whether he was prepared: to name Mr. Altmeyer. Manpower Commissioner Paul: V. McNutt, former national commander of the Amerie can Legion, was ‘among those who had been cons sidered by Mr. Roosevelt, but the former Indiang governor had indicated he was not interested. A leading Democratic senator, confirming that the replacement had been urged on Mr. Truman, pres’ dicted that Mr. Alimeyer’s appointment “would stary a hell of a fight in the senate.” tions likewise would be certain to oppose such. a J shift. Disclosure of the anti-Hines movement came as the house veterans committee prepared to begin publio hearings in the investigation of the veterang admin«
istration voted by the house last month. i
Wallace and Rosenman Active
AMONG THOSE active in the move to gef rid of 66-year-old Gen, Hines, who has held his post under five presidents, are said to be Secretary of Commerce
Henry A. Wallace and Judge Samuel I. Rosenman, who was continued in his post as special White House counsel when Mr. Truman took over.
| Action Committee also is understood to be supporting Mr. Altmeyer's appointment. The anti-Hines group has sé¢ized on recent criticism of the handling of veterans’ affairs to advocate a toplevel housecleaning in an agency which seems’ de= signed to become one of the government's jargest in post-war years. : There is no indication that the President has been convinced that Gen. Hines should be removed, The general, moreover, has shown no inclination ta
agency is under fire. -Gen. Hines’ recent summons to the White House, it was undebstood, was prompted by the President's desire to speed up the handling of veterans’ claims, which .the administrator has admitted are piling up because of personnel shortages.
Veterans Stand by ‘the General’
resign customarily given to. incoming executives but was told to sit tight for the present. Mr. Truman, ac cording to reports gave no hint about his future plana for the job. > Gen, Hines took the post after having served as chief of the transport service in world war I and
scandals of the Harding admifiistration, 1044. gave him permanent rank as a‘'brigadier general and waived his retirement for age.
policies and practices of the veterans administration, generally have stood by “the general” He. also has enjoyed widespread support in congress. Chairs man Rankin (D. Miss), of the house committee now investigating fhe veterans agency gave Gen. Hines a clean bill even before the inquiry was voted. - Mr. tmeyer, statistician, came to Washington early in the New assistant secretary of labor in 1934, helped draft the | social * securify law and a member of the | fost ward in 19. He has served as chairman since
Fog
Veterans organiza q
Sidney Hillman, chairman of the C. I. O. Political, }
retire voluntarily, particularly at a time when hig
GEN, HINES was said to-have made the offer to {
after the “veterans bureau had been rocked by the | Congress in |
Veterans organizations, while critical of some |
former Wisconsin educator and .
4 Deal as a compliance. officer with NRA. He became
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