Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1945 — Page 16
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~The Indianapoli ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE “. * owned and _published
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~ Scripps-Howard - Newspa~
RA Ops PH AH AN SE 0 5 Hr
_ Baruch’s warning should never be forgotten. Sold imme-
‘some think we should take it out on these Americans, of
award to him of the congressional medal, were not at all
mean that belated conviction has been forced upon: that
‘Times
PAGE 16 Thursday, May 3; 1045
Editor Business Manager :
President Ey : _- (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
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) 4 3 ® Circulations. [SCRIPPS — IONARD) <> RILEY 5551 T “Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
MR. BARUCH’S RED FLAG HE government should lease its surplus war plants to ‘private industries for a while before selling them outright, Attorney General Riddle tells congréss. He says this | would give small and new enterprises a better chance to acquire and allow time to determine fair ultimate sales prices. : : : — We don't agree with those indusirialists who oppose any leasing of government-owned plants, The PBaruchHancock report, 14 months ago, recommended. what still seems to us the soundest policy. In general, it said, putright: sales will be preferable. But-—to prevent: idleness of plants during long sales negotiations and to provide opportunities for small business— there also should be authority to lease properties or ‘seil them ‘on credit terme. However, Bernard M. Baruch added emphatically—
REFLECTIONS
_enhower to report ‘on prison camp
“PARIS, May - 3:—We have just
idan soldiers freed from Naz prison
thought: Hungrily they asked about th White Sox, about the weather.’ names of old familiar streets, just mention of them made them feel But, of course, we wanted to experiences, their reactions. - .On the=way back here by pla
them. tr They were-not tortured.
slave labor camps, conditions of whi the world. : ‘Not an. Ordered Policy’
WHERE THERE was brutality individual. Nazi guards and was policy. :
In endless instances they were
‘ Red Cross food supply and could get part of it only
- “This red flag of warning is raised: Leasing must not become a hidden device for. the government to compete | with private plants. It must not become a hidden device | for subsidies—by any name—to anyone. “Once plants leave, the government's hands they must stand on their own feet competitively.” Like Mr. Biddle, we want the government's war plants used as fully as they can be to produce peacetime goods and provide peacetime jobs. These ends may be served by quick sales in some cases, by leasing in others. - But Mr.
diately or leased temporarily, the plants should not be used to promote socialistic control of industry or destroy free competitive private enterprise.
THEY ARE AMERICANS, TOO - “WO American soldiers have asked the U. S. government to protect their parents from terrorist shooting raids on their California home. . Vandals ride by in an
"auto, firing into the house of the invalid father.
How can such a thing happen in this country? Well, the victims are Japanése-Americans. And there are some in this country who don’t think those people have the sdme rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and to protection by the law, as the rest of us American citizens. ~ © - - : Because Japan is our enemy and guilty of atrocities,
Japanese ancestry. Fortunately, they don’t try to punish Americans of German ancestry for Nazi barbarism. But they think that Japanese-Americans somehow are different. . . . cin ye, The record shows the Japanese-American units fight ing in Italy are among our finest soldiers. They have earned fair treatment for themselves and their families here at home. : :
proved their patriotism the hard way, but also for .our
own self-respect and the preservation of American ifleals, By Howard Vincent O'Brien
our law officers must protect the equal rights of all citizens | regardless of ancestry. We can’t win a war against bars |
barism by becoming barbarians ourselves, -
HOME ON THE AUTOMATIC RANGE - PROMISED post-war gadget called the Selector will, it is claimed, turn the radioron in the morning, start: the coffee brewing, regulate the oven, defrost the refrig-| erator, switch lights on and off, do a variety of household | Jobs and, we presume, put out the cat after turning off the radio for the night. yr : The vision of this miraculous machine calls forth another vision. It is of a bride of say 1980, in the first week of her married life. The groom comes home to dinner and | finds her in the kitchen, sitting dejeetedly before the nerve center of the modern household, a panel -of switches, dials | and indieators, slightly more complicated than the present B-29 dashboard,
Ld u u
> THE YOUNG husband nofes with dismay that his]
bride is weeping. He takes the crumpled, pathetic little thing. in his arms, wipes away her tears, and tries to comfort hers What, he asks, is the matter? “Oh, dear,” she sobs,."I'll never learn to cook. The roast 1s ruined and the potatoes are burned black—and it's all mama's fault for coddling me. thing about thermostats.” She looks up at him through tear-headed lashes. “I wa’ afraid to tell you this for fear you wouldn't marry me but oh, darling, I can’t even chawge a fuse plug’
She never showed me a
PYT. DE LORENZO AN ARMY uniform pow is dignifving the figure of 7 Thomas V. De Lorenzo, convicted assaulter, self-con-fagsed perjurer, who once told a congressional committee | that as between producing planes for the navy and winning | # pay raise, ne would: take the raise. ; De Lorenzo is the union leader who, though his loeal | had become virtually non-existent, got Draft Director Hershey to intervene in his induction on the ground that he still, as_a civilian, was essential to the prosecution of the War. Yr : If De Lorenzo provesya reasonably apt rookie, he may get to the China Coast or the Japanese homeland in tim to learn at first hand what would happen to soldjers if many American union leaders shared his cynical attitude toward "war production, .
BELATED CONVICTION NE-need not accept all claims of the more extreme. exi ponents of air power to feel that Billy Mitchell's posts | humous promotion to the rank ‘of major general, and the |
|
impetuous and premature. Any informed German or Jap would say that Mitchell's faith in the efficiency of aerial bombing has been justified. - ox Bor ataens These honors to the pioneer, of military aviation niay
officer, now high in authority a battleship by bo
| starved, beaten,
by bribing the. prison guards with whatever they
possessed in money or jewelry.
It is estimated that around 70,000 Americans were
taken prisotie: About rehabilitation camps.’ Of those wh to Frasmce, 13:per cent have been
cause they. are %uffering, largely from malnutrition.
But almost -all of them can be
health. Of the 12,000 who have alreddy been checked in,. another 7 per cent required special gland diets to regain correct digestive functioning.
"Three Types of Military Prisons’
LET ME explain here that. there
of deliberately planned Nazi military prisons, ? Firsh, there are those. for the prisonérs of war. they
Brufally as they were . abused, compared to the slave labor. Second, there are the political pr as ‘we saw at Buckenwald.
The third type is called “free labor.” i tain nationals from other. nations Labor Quislings, they were |
to work for the Nazis.
Nazi Prison Camps] . sENRY Ww. Manz | By Malcolm W.-Bingay I (Editor's “note: “Mr, Bingay, editorial director |
of the Detroit Free Press, is one of a group of editors invited té Europe by Gen. of ‘the Army Eis-
recovered allied military personnel camp at which we, collectively, interviewed more than a thousand Amer-
These rescuéd Americans: are -the happiest men on the, continent of Europe, They have but one | Home, . It is all they want to talk about.
fiotes and here is a synopsis of our findings: - There were not organized atrocities visited.upon
They were -not tréated as were the victims of the
: Yet, this brutality was so general that it reveals {| an utter disregard by the Nazis agreement for the care of prisoners of war, The worst thing was studied starvation. None of them was given sufficient foed,
12.000 of these have finall
“1 Alles
>
conditions.) returned from a
camps. .
¢ Cubs ahd the They rattled. off | because the very ‘good. : talk about their
ne we compared
- ve
ch have horrified 1
it” was done by not- an ordered
of the Geneva
robbed of their
v_ landed at the o have returned hospitalized be-
restored ‘to good
- Hoosier
“VETERANS MUST
are three types |BE TAKEN CARE OF”
got off easy {By 1. P. D., Indianapolis L | 1 see that organized labor is chal-{
ison’ camps, such jenging the right of servicemen to| These coms their old jobs if those are held by
who volunteered |Persons with more seniority. { I have been a union man all my
well fed and comfortably bedded in clean, neat, sani- life. as was my father. I also am
tary houses. By this pattern we see that the
mand had methodically planned things as they have The Nazis lived up to the Geneva made
been revealed. agreement on the treatment of wa
as far as they felt necessary to make a pretense,” |
‘The reason for this is obvious.
a veteran of world war I, and in-an] issue of this kind I take the side of the veterans because they have] unions in this country!
Nazi high com-
| possible. | First, the veteran deserves every- !
High Nazi offi- thing that the nation can afford <
r prisoners only
cials ate imprisoned in the United States and Great {give him because of his willingness |
Britain. prisals. ment accorded to all Russian prisone signed the Geneva agreement. So it was that, in Americans and British,
They wanted to protect
Russian
with whom we "talked stressed the
treatment accorded the Russians. = | i 4
This is made more apparent by the. treat-
the same camps with the
tortured, murdered.
to leave his home to sacrifice and |suffer untold hardships and pain in| order that America might go -on.{ {The months and years he has spent
them from re-
rs. Russia never
struction. cannot be erased by a| lgood job, neither can a good job! {make up for .the loneliness and| heartaches brought on by away from-his loved ones.
-prisoners were All of those
different type of
WORLD ‘AFFAIRS—
Not only in justice to these fellow-Americans who have | The First Hou rs
SAN FRANCISCO, May 3—During the first hours ‘earned $10,880, then the veteran neighbor and gradually builds up after the opening ofthe United -Nations’ conclave, (Should be given credit for 18 years ogractive “rule of law”
those who attended it suffered a kir They were obsessed by détails.
If organized labor wants to be fair let it compute seniority both for the worker and the veteran by the! {money earned by both during the
{the veteran, For example: If the {veteran had: served. three years and this pay had been $1800 and the man who had taken his_job had
1d of shell shock. | because the worker had made as]
. . . Why, they won-, much in tliree years as the vetéran|
dered fretfully, were there only 46 flags on the plat- {would have made in 18 years of] | !
dozen more? tunes?
Why did the band Why di@ the 17. boys
| form, when there was mounting provided for half a service
Pray-ight opera | and girls of the veterans’ interest at heart, they can
armed services march on like the-chérus of-a bur. find a way to take - care of ~both
lesque show?
evidence al a “peace
strained?
Why were soldiers and sailors in {without causing any undue hardmeeting, anyhow? , . . Why iship. | wasn't the setting- more magnificent—or more re-
The time could ‘be split equally among the men in the shop 1so that all could have an equal share
Such trivia was weighed and measured with febrile {of the work and its benefits.
passion. And nobody came to any col
nclusion, because, | Whatever is done, the veterans ginnings of this historic event, just|
co TIE tr 0
Forum death
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious con- _ Yroversies 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 ho way “implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The Times assumes no responsibility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
“MEMORY WILL GROW BRIGHTER” By H. K., Indianapolis
offered alreadly for memorial to the late President of the United States
being | Such ideas include the building of | { hospitals, renaming of streets, na-|
tional parks, and similar ones.
Of course, most of Franklin Roosevelt's admirers appreciate the
President will be building the foundations of lasting peace. A world organization that stops any outlaw nation from robbing its an instead of
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the
£
your right to say it.”
“LET'S TRY FAITH JUST THIS ONCE”
By Mrs. Frances T. Beotl, 1822 N. Dela: ware si,
With news of victories coming to {us from all fronts, we are also hearling expressions of doubts and fears {concerning the fruits of these vic- | tories. In a barber shop I heard a {man say, “We have always had wars, and we always will” On a | streetcar another expressed the | opinion that certain nations did not | even want peace, that their diplo-| mats were co-operating at peace | [talks merely to satisfy the fighting | man and his family and allay the | | suspicions of tire rest of the world. | And a minister, speaking to ;
~|group gathered to pray for the suc-
cess of the 8an Francisco confer-|
fence, stated that he feared “our.
{catise is already lost; they did not |
in foreign lands amid death and de-| Scores of suggestions have been even open the conference with |
lprayer for fear of offending the] | non-Christians present.” There is food for thought in every lone of these statements; each has| {irrefutable truth in it. True it is {that out of four-thousand recorded |years of civilization, less than two
{hundred have been spent in peace.
: (fact that the foremost memorial of But true also is it that civilization n { * | “ |period. of absence from his job of{a) {5 the memory of the American |phas ‘accomplished many things for)
{the good of mankind and who can lsay with authority that they may {not yet achieve “peace on earth”? (It is quite possible that some un-| scathed nations might be at this]
{peace table with their tongue in|
“— PPOLITICAL SCENE—
|'Reclistic’
By Thomas L. Stokes
SAN FRANCISCO, May 3.~It 1s hard 6 get away from practical politics, or the technique known as | “being realistic,” if an alibi is > i y needed for something not quite : : right ‘and proper, -:It happens in domestic affairs} * It happens, too; in international affairs: - . _ i Compromises began long ago in the préparatory stage of this United Nations conference here. They: started at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington where the four big powers—Great Britain, Russia, China and] the United States—sat down arid wrote a preliminary} draft of & world security organization. ’ 3 They were earried further at the Yalta confere ence in the cqneession to Russia, providing that any} one of the five big powers as permanent members off the proposed security council—France in’ addition to the four named above—could veto action against anf aggressor, This, incidentally, was satisfactory to ours politicians, too, because it would help in getting sen ate ratification, There was, also, the. concessio which gave Russia three. votes in the proposed ases sembly and six for Great Britain, eounting her doe} minions and India, ]
Argentina Had Become a Symbol
THE UNITED STATES, a sponsor ef this cone} ference, had kept fairly free of the exploitation of} practical politics for ourselves, though we had played}
—the-game with concessions for others. Wa had kept)
the flag of idealism fluttering rather hopefully, Even) after the conference opened here it was others, not ourselves, who were pressing for concessions of one sort and another, principally Russia. y That, perhaps, is why our initiative in pushing through the admission of Argentina—which we fore merly had outlawed as a Fascist government, sympa thetic and helpful to our enemies--created such a8 wave of disappointment here, and undoubtedly in thes cotintry at large, Argentina had become the symboly of our clean break with Fascism and Naziism, even though it ‘was, so to speak, one of our family here ind the western ‘hemisphere. We acted. to be sure, tod protect ourselves from trouble within that would complicate our external defense problem, but we alsog were hewing clean to the line of the philosophy for which we were fighting. . That meant a great deal. We reneged on that here, and we have a very§ guilty conscience, It is a self-confessed blot on our escutcheon i the name of practical politics and “realism.” Every} member of the American delegation deplores it pri«$ vately. Senator Vandenberg (R. Mich.), a delega« tion vice chairman, was frank enough to excuse it] publicly on the ground of expediency, as a necessary J compromise to help in the over-all result, the suc«j cess of the conference, a measure of practical politics,
We Need the Latin-American Nations
DESPITE THEIR répugnance, the American dele’ gation decided it was a necessary gesture to the nad tions in our Latin-American orbit, who wanted it “done, as well, as to Great Britain which has import«3 ant trade relations with Argentina. We need they Latin-American nations in this econference—as wal also need England. And we will need them in the? world security organization—fér practical political § purposes, for their votes to be explicit. It is obvious = if discouraging, that the play: of power politics still § gues on, with ourselves and Great Britain and Russia § developing our orbits of influence. We are protect= d ing ours. At the Chapultepec conferenck in Mexico City in February was designed a set of specifications—paper | specifications—for return of the black sheep Argen - tina, to the fold. She declared war—on paper. She | has promised other things. There has been little performance yet, But .the practical argument 1: that she is more likely to do them back in thé fold, where we can influence her and watch her, where
{ she has a sort of moral obligation, than isolated oute
side the fold. ; x. Ee The realists. who 100E on international matters still as a big game with innings and a scoreboard, proudly proclaimed the “defeat” of Rusgia on the Are. gentina issue. But was it such a spléndid “victory" for us? id » 3 The success of the conference in creating. g world security organization is paramount. Some compro~ mises must be made. But does it help,.in the over-all result, for us, in 3 our favored position, to compromise ourseives too far? 4 Our moral influence is most valuable and effective,
arms will be finest tribute of all %0| their cheek, and that victim nations IN WASHINGTON—
his vision and spirit.
While it is not probable that his:
name-will be attached to this world
or- agencies, all of us who cherish Roosevelt's memory will think of him in connection with it. History will forever, if the effort to establish world security succeeds, associate the names of Ro@sevelt, Churchill’ and Stalin with the be-
| politicians in double-breasted blue serge were some- | thing more than little politicians. | . #
: “STILL CONTEND | ceremonial would he something more than just an-
| ment of seats
| and complicated ds world peace ever to come out of a |
| Observers Agreed on One Thing
Atom to myake life a neate thing...
| of course, there was no conclusion to come to. Every- must be properly taken care of, and 35 Woodrow Wilson may be con-
body tried so desperately to believe that these little the sooner all concérned realize that! sidered as one of the first prophets
the better off they
Deep inside himself, everybody hoped that. the
other meéting iti a all, ‘with spotlights for the. news- i} WAS RIGHT.
officials struggling frantically ‘to unravel traffic jams | !
will be. »
| reel cameras and croaking microphones and small By Mrs. Walter Haggerty, Indianapolis
{of this hope.
There will inevitably be many
- memorials of many kinds built in
|this nation to Franklin Roosevelt. | But there is time to decide on what {form these memorials shall take
I still contend that I was right|The Lincoln Memorial in Washing-
Ti everybody's heart I think -was-a-seeret-hope-that-lin.—my. prediction that the war, ton was not planned until many de-
when the chairman's gavel crashed, an angel, bearing | militarily, was
the torch of wisdom, would miraculously appear,
There Wasn't Any Miracle
BUT THERE wasn't any
miracle
{big battles since
angel. There wasn't any. Here was just a theater, crowded with unand _reporters and ang technical consultants and a number o celebrated visitors, ‘And. in the -press a Briwtsh correspondent,” complaining to quiet, well-bred but disfinctly nettled
guished-leoking delegates tact Gen.
advisers more-or-le DAICONY Wal
usher i not war, .
over in
then
Germany | cades {April 20th. There have been no|martyred emancipator. The Wash although ington memorial shaft likewise was {fighting still continues and will for not begun until many years after some time to come, it is that of the Father of His Country passed the frenzied Nazis, You may ‘con-|away. ’ Eisenhower and he willl ¢ [tell you the same. Military warfare the | and fighting are not the same, We memory will grow brighter as the | have fighting in Indianapolis but hates and prejudices of the hour
after the passing of the
There need be no rush to honor memory of a man whose
fade away.
voice that he represented a great London daily; and | there w
i$ no seat for. him Te lb : h The usher, who had nothing to do with the assign- | Si e Glances=— By Ga rait
answered his repreaches quite testily, And you gqt the feeling that at this particular spot in the hall there was remarkably little .international good will - : As 1 looked down on the delegates, with the movie | lights blazing én their faces and bald heads, it seemed | to-me—that—¥ was -lookirig-at-a string of white beads. And this made me sad; for how was an idea so vast f
tring of white beads? The secretary of stale sald his piece as if he were i the governor welcomed every- | state of California; and the mayor | Francisco's honor and privilege at be- | ing storie goings on, And the opening session was over, There had been no invocation==phviously impossible with so many theologies in the audience A body's national anthem had | been played | back where he came from riding-— L y female-driven bus or taxi. And don't think ||
can’t drive busses!
preaching a4 sermon; an body to hi expressed Sa
ng the scene of such }
great
FEvervbody went riding ir
Ri
LIGHTS BURNED SII night in the Palace hotel, where the press is quartered. And the click of typewriters could be heard until the fog of dawn blew in from the sea. y AT : : There were three machines going in my room. They stuttered like an engine with difty spark plugs; and ‘there were long stretches of what would have been silence, but for the groans and chrpes of tired, sweating men, trying so hard to squeeze their doubts and hopes-atid emotions alfogether; into & page or two of: ink and paper. ; * i " g Downstairs, telegraph operators” bent “over: their Hj ‘keys, passing on to a tensely waiting” world what, its |} observers believed was likely to come of this latest
Oh)
lance of being more animal than
~ fstart’ anywhere, Let's. male this "| one the last one.
fare here with vengeance in their| “heats, but the world has seen many | |a cynic “come to scoff’ and remain
But if the union really has the goanization or any of its branches 1, «work and.pray.”. And. when it!
iseemed expedient, even the great {Apostle Peter denied Christ three
hopeless. It will not be easy; certainly there are great obstacles. And lif we are to overcome them, we must first beliefe that “it can be done.” | Faith, hope and charity; what] mortal can say that faith is not| the greatest of these? Let's try} faith, just this once—we; might | move & mountain. : 2 ” » . “LET'S MAKE THIS THE LAST ONE” 1By-o-6: ky Ovesseas nt a Just a féw lines writen by a front line infantryman somewhere in Germany. Yesterday we captured a large city located in'the indus- | trial center of the Ruhr valley.” These people "of Germany are a] {proud people, who have |
|
been | |trained from the time they were| lold enough to talk “that they are) | members’ of & super race, and ‘are | superior- to all other people, but | they are learning different now, the hard way. { When we attack a town now it isn't just the soldiers we. must fight. Often it's women and children, and that makes it very difficult . for the Yank doughboy, for we are civilized people and we have been taught that women and children are first. . Well, when we captured town, we French and Russian slavé laborers. 1 have been observing these people and they have the appear-
this
human, They are half starved and very poorly clothed and when| they were xturned loose on streets they acted just like crazy people, picking up scraps of food and ,cigargt butts. These slaves were all located In very poor barfacks, Women and men together. They work in the factories and if they didn't. work they didn’t eat. It certainly was a mess. 80 I ask you people of the good old U. 8. A. to never let one man get too—much- power and to remember that we are a government of the people, for the peo~ ple and by the ‘people, and nevér ‘again shall we let another war
_~ DAILY THOUGHT | ‘For thou has girded me with strength unto. the battle: thou
times, ere he Became the corner. | stone of the Christian church. . |
All is not lost. The cause is not | ] { ing aviation adherents qver rapidly
liberated thousands of |
the, peller type engines—with cruising speeds ranging
Fantasies By Max B. Cook
WASHINGTON, May 3.—Alarm is being expressed by sound-think« §
increasing claims of post-war Aair- | craft performance, ; | They fear that, with the letdown that is bourd te follow war's end, aviation will suffer from such™ overstatements.” i Much depends upon how long the Pacific war will} Jast, also how rapidly seme conversion of the aviation? industry to manufacture of peacetime planes will be! allowed following V-E-day. ; re One glaring example of recent overstatement came in" a Pacific coast story predicting 100,000 mile-per«d hour speed, whith was played on page 1 throughout | “the-country—¥-later-developed. that the figure wag | a figment of a reporter's imagination, based on al statement that future posisble speed was “almos unlimited.” But the damage was done. ; A speed of 100,000 miles per hour represents morq | than 1666 miles per ‘minute and more than 27 miles | per second. This would mean ability to fly around? the world at the equator in 15 minutes or four times around in one hour, : i
One Minute From New York to Denver
{F A PILOT could handle that terrific speed he'd | have to start slowing down immediately after he | reached top speed in order to land at his starting point. It would requiré only one minute to’ reach New York from Denver, eliminating takeoff and} landing time (theoreticully) but the pilot would have | ta devote all energies to cutting down speed once } he got going. : 3
will be something like this, say possibly some two yeardafter V-X day: : ; nt DOMESTIC COMMERCIAL AIRLINES: Planes carrying (frem 21 to possibly 150 passengers--two te six propeller type engines—with cruising speed rang= ing from 165 miles per hour to possible 350 miles per hour. (Maybe 50 miles higher with good tailwind.) TRANSOCEANIC AIRLINES: Planes carrying from 42 to possibly 400 passengers—four to six pros
from 200 to possibly 350 miles per hour,
question as: to Whether jets and gas turbine units (with propellers, or “alr screws, will be sufficiently developed, along with airplane structure to utilize them, that early after the war.” The plane structure
(as great or greater than thé speeds of sound; near or over 700 miles per hour). : We are told that one 10,000 engine has been developed, What type of airplane
in a combination -with Jet, has not been announced, One thing Is practically certain. That is when jet “and gas turbine ‘engines are put to use, cruising speeds will be Increased 'by several hundreds of
go over 600 miles per hour is not known,
£. To get down to earth, the post-war aviation picture |
(0,000 H.P. Engine Developed 1 JET 'AND GAS TURBINE ENGINES: There is al must be capable of withstanding supersonic speeds!
h.~p. gas turbine |
will be developed for this type" engine, possibly used |
miles per hour for long flights. How far that will | RS: , They Will not be in general tise |
by private fliers. They will be in demand, however, by hospitals, sheriffs, forast fangers, U. navy, police, !
or more
U. 8. coast |
»
. And rounc room weatl heart
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