Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1945 — Page 12
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE President ; :
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Times
‘he Indianapolis
: “PAGE 12 Wednesday, May 9, 1945
HENRY W. MANZ ‘Editor © Bilsiness Manager
(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)
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«Po RILEY 5551
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¥ SCRIPPS ~ HOWARD | “Give LAght and the People Will Find Their Gwn Way
‘SAN FRANCISCO 'ZIGZAG
| SAN FRANCISCO there is more hope that the con- ~~ férence will agree on a charter for a new world league, despite deeper gloom over the Polish deadlock. This is a sontradiction, but one easy to understand.- In both cases Russia is the key. oe She is now willing fo have a world organization if she vetains veto power under its charter. Ih Poland she is Mready wielding veto power over international authority, sven though at Yalta she specifically agreed to joint Big Chree settlement of the Polish question. The net is that Russia is more co-operative in drafting rules for the future, but less co-operative in living up now to- agreements she made in the past.
= ” » ” » » THERE ARE three types of reaction to this situation, The pessimist says a world organization must be based on mutual good faith and that therefore Russia, in re-
peatedly breaking her present agreements, has destroyed |-
the possibility of an effective league. The optimist says the Russian dictatorship in eastern European countries is unimportant compared with operations of a new league, which will make everything all ght in the end. But mos{ diplomats at San Francisco avoid these two extremes for a middle ground.- They lack the optimist’s faith in the cure-all potency of any international organiza- | tion, much less in any written constitution. They share
_ the uessimist’s belief that Russia's high-handed acts are
more important. than her questionable promises. But they think a weak league is better than none, and that it will be stronger potentially with Russia inside than out.” Russia will have to come in to get the desired American loans and other support. -
THIS NEWSPAPER goes along with that majority judgment at San Francisco, which is the attitude of the United States delegation. We have been deeply disturbed by Russia's ‘acts. Never more than now, when she has
~ kidnaped the Polish leaders and defied Britain and the
United States to do anything about her lawlessness. But to allow such things to wreck the San Francisco conference would be to compound the tragedy. a3 Ot course no league is going to work miracles. - Nevertheless an international organization is essential—with Russia if possible, without her if necessary. We hope the
+ United States delegation and fhe conference majority will
carry-on as-they have begun, with patience and flexibility, comprising on details but insisting on the foundation. Regardless of what Russia has done ‘and may do, so long as the league charter gloes not underwrite injustice, but provides the basis for international co-operation that is progress. More than that we cannot expect.” Less than that America will not accept.
THE A. P. SHOULD EXPLAIN‘.
FIFTY-THREE accredited, honor-bound correspondents representing the press associations, newspapers and radic chains of America, Britain, France, Australia and India could be. wrong. Bit even with every desire to-be charitable, it is impossible to view otherwise than seriously their denunciation of the Associated Press and the chief of its Paris bureau, Mr. Edward Kennedy, for violation of the censorship timing agreement on the German surrender story. >
The charges made to Gen. Eisenhowey, with a request |
for a restoration of the ban on the A. P.'s filing facilities, were not merely those of a competing agency. They were made by the representatives of the allied press in Panis, including some of the A. P.’s most important American member papers. That so many should unite in such a sweeping formal condemnation is without precedent. iren, Fisenhower himself has informed the A. P. that the Kennedy suspension was “due to self-admitted, deliberate violation of SHAEF regulations and breach of confidence.” i .
» » » o n » THE ONLY printed explanation so far credited to Mr. Kennedy is that he did not think SHAEF had any right to impose a pledge to withhold. the story until officially reledsed. That excuse will not stand up. To become an accredited correspondent Mr. Kennedy was obliged to pledge himself to abide by just such rules as covered this case. To protest the rules after accepting the restricted information was too late. The othér correspondents kept their word. We agree with the A. P. that Mr. Kennedy has the right. —and, we would add, the duty-~to makg a full statement. 2 ‘We also share i Europe can be lifted. But the Associated Press has .not yet explained why its. officials "did not withdraw this story—touted as “on of the greatest beats in newspaper history”’-—after the Eisenhower action and after the other correspondents had protested “one of the most disgraceful, deliberate and unnthical double-crosses in the history of journalism.”
ts hope that military censorship in
VETERANS AND QUACKS HE army newspaper Stars and Stripes lias taken an edi- ) torial crack at the “psychoneurosis fad,” While admit“ting the value of reputable psychiatrists in authentic mental illness, it claims that every screwball with thick lenses and a long haircut is setting up shop as ar expert on the returning veteran. The service paper’s accusations may be a bit sweeping, hut its warning is timely. Somehow the feeling has grown up that every man who has seen combat is verging on psychoneurosis. Families haye been warned to watch, for symptoms in returned veterans. All this'might well invite a boom in post-war p§¥chiatric quackery. «Certainly most young men are going.to be affected by exposure to the grim business of killing." Many are going to be noticeably changed. But all .the changes will not be : ological. gh £4 i rh bom will avoid the preconceived suspicion that § serviceman-is-neurotic simply because he t, we. doubt tha
Price in Marion Coun- |
REFLECTIONS — Peace Quest By Peter Edson SAN FRANCISCO, May 9.—To Ahmet Emin Yalman, president
represéntative of the Turkish delegation to the United Nations conference
has come one of the strangest and pleasantest experiences of the whole. San Franciso meeting, marking the end of another,
smaller search for peace that began back in 1939, or maybe it began a couple of hundred years before that. Anyway— In 1939 Yalman was a Turkish commissioner to the Century of Progress Exposition in New York. In June of that year there came to the Turkisb embassy in Washington as delegation of Molokans [Spiritual Christian Dukh-i-zhizniki] from California. They wanted to migrate to Turkey and the case came to the attention of Commissioner Yalman in New York because it was in the nature of “new business.” Now the [Dukh-i-zhizniki] Molokans are a lovely people, a clean and humble people something like the American Quakers. The world “Molokan” means “a drinker of milk.” They eat no pork. Molokans are pacifists. Originally they came from what used to be Southern Russia, though their homelands are now in [the southern Caucasus, including eastern] Turkey on the Russian border. Over the centuries they had built up their own customs and culture in which the desire for peace was always a dominant influence.
One of the Prophets Had a Dream
WHEN THEY grew tired of the continual warring and massacres on the Turkish-Russian border some of the younger spirits had migrated to America to find peace and here they had prospered. There is a small, colony of them in San Francisco, larger communities of several thousand families [of Pryguny and other tribes] in the Fresno and Los Angeles areas. They made good citizens. They pay their taxes and they never cause any trouble. But in 1939 a group of these [Dukh-i-zhizniki] Molokans from the Los Angeles colony wanted to return to their homeland and they came to the Turkish embassy in Washington to see what could be done about it. Their reason for wanting to leave America was this: One of the prophets of the [Dukh-i-zhizniki] Molokans had a dream. In this dream it was revealed to him that the whole world was going to be engulfed in a horrible war. The United States was going to be involved in this war, according to the prophet, and the only country in the world that wouldn't be involved would be Turkey. So the [Dukh-i-zhizniki] Molokans wanted to go back where they came from to live in peace [near Mt. Ararat waiting for the return of their prophet M.G. Rudomyotkin with Jesus Christ]. Well, the Turkish embassy staff and Commissioner Ahmet Emin Yalman thought this was very nice, but a little bit, crazy. Nobody believed in dreams of old
men who might be homesick. Besides, if there was a war, they figured Turkey would be among the first countries to be involved and.the United States would be the last. Why didn't the [Dukh-i-zhizniki] Molokans realize that and stay where they were in peaceful America?
They Had a Wonderful Time
SO THE [Dukh-i-zhizniki] MOLOKANS came back to California and here they have stayed, But Ahmet Emin Yalman, now an editor of a newspaper in Turkey, never forgot the strange dream of the [Dukh-i-zhiznik] Molokan prophet, and when Editor Yalman arrived in San Francisco for the United Nations conference, one of his first requests was to visit the Molokans [, their only congregation in America]. They arranged a little meeting of the Molokan Mothers’ club out at the neighborhood house [across their meeting hall on Carolina street] in San Francisco's Potrero Hill district. Editor Yalman went out with six other members of the Turkish delegation, and they had a wonderful time. There were several hundred of the older people there. They all talked Turkish and they all wanted to shake hands with every one of the delegates, The younger Molokans have drifted away from the old traditions what and become Americanized. But the old folks wanted to hear how things were with their relatives and forbears back on the Turkish border. They were told. The Molokans' desire to return home, however, is
all gone. It was just a dream. They've found peace here.
ft WORLD AFFAIRS—
Liberation | By Walker Stone
DACHAU prison CAMP, Germany, May (Delayed) —In the end of one of the barracks in this grim, dingy camp are about JO : hardy Norwegians wfio have survivel three to four years of forced labor on starvation rations. Several speak English—they have lived in America. They were arrested tn Norway for sabotage and other aids, to the allies. Ye When the U. 8. 45th division liberated this camp, the leader of the Norwegian group took over a small office’ which had been used by the SS. guards. There I found the Norwegians crowded about a fable, eager ly -opening Canadian Red- Cross parcels, It was something to watch—the looks on the faces of those mien who for bitter, long years had subsisted on- a daily ration of a pint of ersatz coffee, & quart of swill-like soup and one-fourth of a loaf of bread—as they gazed in wide-eyed gratitude at the contents of the parcels. I
Just Little Token Packages
THEY WERE just little’ token packages. The things each one contained couldn't have cost more than a dollar, but to the.Norwegians they represented riches beyond what they .had dareds dream Here is what the material abundance of America meant to those men, the contents of each parcel
being:
&
apolis: cheddar cheese from Swift's, Chicago; powdered milk from Borden; domino cane sugar from New York;- biscuits from Wilkes-Barre, Pa.: flakes of tuna from Los Angeles; chocolate from Dorchester, Mask.; Swan soap from Cambridge, Kas.,, and Philig Morris cigarets. . The inhabitants of the town pf Dachau claim they didn’t know what went on in the close-by prison camp where 13,000 died in the first four months of this year. Their organs of smell must be numb. For the ovens of the crematory here, cold since the battle of liberation May 1, have been started again under orders of the American army to dispose ‘of 1400 rotting corpses to which are added dally more than 200 dying of typhus, dysenterf and plain starvation,
Not Completely Insensitive THE SMELL from the crematory couldn’ have been much different through. the 12 years during which the villagers were so unconcerned about whatwent on behind the walls of the prison camp, | But it would be inaccurate to say that the people of ‘Dachau are completely insensitive ‘to’ death and horror—if the behavior of one hausfrau can be taken'| as an example. She walked along ‘the road beside the tracks where the corpses of hundreds of political prisoners lay on the floors of freight cars and ope coal cars. ~ Those were corpses of men who didn’ survive the 22-day trip from Buchenwald. . On the other side of the road were the stiff bodies of half a dozen S. 8. troopers killed a few days earlier in the Dachau liberation battle. Walking past, the ‘woman uttered, in shocked tones, the German equivalent of “how awful,” lifted her hands to. her face and turned away from the roadside scene evidently so: offensive to her. She looked toward the railroad track scene whicll apparently didn't. offend her e of the fitness of things. It seemed to be a quéstion of whose corpse, and what one has become accustomed to seeing. A
To The Point— THE BRITISH “Who's Who lists Hitler's phone
dumber as 11-6101. Juet a bit too late—we already had his number.” tke HE Lin
“SIX MONTHS AT THE MOST"
By E. R. Egan, 701 Markwood ave.
-armed-forces because of the lack of
Hoosier
If the ordinary radio news commentator were less sanguine of temperament and more given to selfanalysis, he might place himself in the same category with the hinterland Chinese, who are not in the
training or intelligence to use modern firearms, when he broadcasts to the Japanese in effect they have nothing to worry about for at least
Forum
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious-con-troversies excluded, Because of the volume received, let ters 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.)
a couple of years as it will take that long to defeat them. Jt might have given the same con- | ditions we started out with. Let us| take stock of our assets. An island kingdom has to have a navy. Japan's now’ is practically non-existent. Any nation has to have an air force and Japan has wasted hers covering a territory out of all proportion to her resqurces. : . America’s and Britain's navies combined can now not only blockade Japan proper, they can lay down a barrage that would cever if necessary any. landing force which could be preceded by aif bombardment, as invading forces advanced that could be depended upon to eradicate any undercover resistance. Their cities” and war objective# first destroyed even as Germany's have been.
| “WE COULD
GUARANTEE PEACE” By Si Moore, 2008 W, 16th si.
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the
{CONSTANT REMINDER”
your right te say it.” “IT WOULD BE A
3 By A Father With a Young Son, Indi. anapolis
I offer the following suggestion as one means of helping to keep world peace. It is not the cure, by any means, but at least may be something to remind the péople of what a dreadful thing war is. - ~ It is suggested that a mohument be erected by the German government under the direction and plans of the world peace organization and that these monuments be a symbol of what naziism did to the world. This monument is to have as its general design the Nazi swastika, and on the swastika dll the crimes and the atrocities that occurred under this sign. For example— death, destruction, murder, robbery,
It was very pleasing to read Mrs. Haggerty's letter advocating a
draft beginning at the age of 40, and, as I have advocated, there should be no age limit above that. There should be no exemptions for Presidents, congressmen, senators, churchmen, ‘labor goons, munitions manufacturers, millionaires, form makers, farmers, ten-million government loafers or anyoneabove 40 except doctors, dentists, nurses and skilled workers in chemistry and engineering. In this way" we could guarantee peace, as it cannot be guaranteed any other way. Even the glamour party at San Francisco is fighting and quitting
A thorough-going concentration
as some knew it would. You can’t
ibe’ carried oul further. On the
Corned beef from the Kosher Feinberg Co, Minne. |
|on "Japan proper could put her out! find peace under a bottle cap, and of the war In six months at the | those seem to be the most japunmost. Make no mistake about it, | dant article there. and what the civilized world has| I advocate passing a law that will uncovered in both Germany and require a two-thirds’ vote for deJapan has not only sickened the claring war. Those who are for it ‘world of now but inspired it to write to Washington. A lot of peofight it in Japan as in Germany to |ple who like blood money are whina compete disintegration of mili-|ing.that the Krauts and Japs would tarism, and instead of encourag- have bombed rock gardens and ing these miserable representatives | pentagon palaces apd what not. —Togo, Yamashita and Hirohito of [Radar will stop any plane or sub a heathen, ignorant, brutish regimé 'at 100 miles distance, , We could which cannot co-operate with a have kept a mosquito from getting modern soctety of nations — they |into Pearl Harbor ar Alaska or any should be warned that the time is | other place. So could ‘the other imminent when the same logical countries ¥f they had not listened development in Germany will be in |to the war-mongers. Yes, the scievidence in Japan and at no dis- |entists will stop the slaughters when tant date. we give them as good chance as we The brutalism that fires on un- have the dealers in munitions and armed hospital ships hitherto un- |souls. Again, it is pleasing to note escorted and unarmed, will in the [that many are reading of the piles futdfre be met with fhe same de- |of dead who would be safe at home
fense accorded pirates and whatever is in the arsenal of offense.
Side Glances=By Galbraith FE
if brains had been advocated more
starvation, and torture; this can
{monument stand, or hase, the {names of the leaders of this curse jand also a history qf the crimes {and atrocities that were committed on the spot, should be inscribed. It is my thought that this monument be erected in every ge, town, city or country where the Nazi heel of destruction committed a crime, no matter how great or how small, and that the German government be responsible for the ‘erection of thése monuments and the upkeep through the years: For every 20 years of. good behavior, the Germdn government would be alowed to take down one of the reminders. This idea was. suggested by the question of my little boy. This question is probably asked thoiusands of times a day all over the world. “What's that, Daddy”? The thought occurred that if a monument “is erected that it would be a constant reminder to the present generation of what they did and a means for reminding the younger generation of what they can expect if théy fol. low in the same footsteps. ” . #n “THE ONLY BASIS OF HARMONY" By The Watchman, Indianapolis In spite of the. very obvious attempt hy news correspondents to smooth ‘over, concfal or minimize the unco-operative attitude and the open and repeated flouting of
sad but foregone conclusion that only a weak and Spineless accept~ ance of the Communist dictates is the only basis of harmony with Russia. Russia is run by a dicta-
Encouraging |
‘| must be said that Secretary of State Stettinius and {
| fusing to, get too much excited by perplexing points |
| the same, the stake here in the future being what |
By Thémas L. Stokes.
+. BAN FRANCISCO, May 9.~Understanding Russia still is one of | the major problems before the | United - Nations conference. i i Progress can: be reported, It : our delegation, by and large, are making a very hons est effort. y are acting with marked restraint, re
of view and annoying incidents hard for the Ameri ‘can mind to comprehend. | re It would be wise for the American people to do
it is,
k Pops Out at Unexpeéted Times
wv : FOREIGN MINISTER MOLOTOV, like‘a jack-ine the-box, pops out at unexpected times in a surprising, irritating and confusing way, just when it looks as if } everything was calm and serene again, It was so in | the case of the Russian arrest of 16 Polish leaders, the ‘climax to a series of poppings-oit—insistence at the outset on four presidents of the conference to satisly ‘Russian national pride, the early attempts to admit Poland without her compliace ‘with the Yalta agreement, the fight on admissionof Argentina. 250 1 The United States and Great Britain, with the help of smaller nations and dependencies in their ree | spective orbits of influence, rather rubbed Russia's 73 nose in the dirt on the Argentine issue, overwhelming her. Whatevep the efficacy at the time of that strategy—if it was efficacious—it has been realized since that it 1s not the best course, over-all, to set ° Russia off on one side, to isolate ‘her, considering =i what this conference has set out to do. Since that ° time_there has been a real attempt to avoid anything 3 so obviously of that intent, difficult as Russia makes it with her sporadic surprises. ¢
Problem Is to Maintain Balance
THE PROBLEM of the United States is to maine # tain a balance amqng the Big Three at this confer & ence, and to avoid anything like setting ourselves and | Russia off against each other. Great Britain, in her quiet way, would appear to be seeking to promote | something of this sort. She has kept right close in | our shadow, assuming & secondary role, but appare ently quietly encouraging us to step out in fron{ as champion against Russia, Great Britain has her own problems in Europe, which involve Russia very ° closely. She would like our backing and is playing cagily to have that general effect produced. The British are easier for us to understand. Buf’ it is recognized that it is not too wise for us to get too much in that role, or the international organiza | tions of nations we are trying to set up here may degenerate ‘into a bal&nce of power structure such as | hagexisted before. A In tryfng to understand the Russians, to give them the benefit of every -possible doubt, we are guided by a very practical consideration. It would be well # for the American people to understand this. It is | realized that we must have R in the world organ. | ization, that, for the long haul in the years to come, it is betler to have her at the table when disturbing situations arise involving her than not at the able, President Rooosévelt recognized that and was willing * to make concessions to get Russia into this confere ence, as he did at Yalta. 3
Russia Feels Her Qats OUR REPRESENTATIVES here, too, have come to understand the Russians better after dealing with them. They find their attitude a ggod deal like that of the United States some years ago, even after the last war. The United States considered herself a 3 vigorous, self-reliant nation. Raised into the world by her own bootstraps, independent, on her own, not beholden to anybody else. Russia, which is really © | a new Russia, has: proved herself under her new ree = gine, feels her oats as a lusty nation. She is inclined, as we were, to be nationalistic, almost isolationist, She is big enough to protect herself now, as she has | proved in the war, and does not feel that her whole | salvation depends on a.concord with other nations. A “Yet, at this conference, she has shown herself sine | cerely anxious to accept that relationship. She knows - she is going to need our economic help, as she got it in the war, to help rebuild herself. It is our earnest endeavor to get her into the organization, for that | is to our own interest. Mr. Molotov, in his latest 3 press conference, probably his last this trip, was very } emphatic in his predictions about the success of the conference. : Altogether. the picture is now very encouraging,
IN WASHING TON— Food Issue
pledges by the Soviet Union, it is 8’
By Daniel M. Kidney
WASHINGTON, May 9.—Rep. George W. Gillie (R. Ind.), member of the house agricultural committee and the only veterinarian in congress, doesn't believe that Americans need tighten their belts so we can supply food to starving Europeans. ; He took. issue with this recommendation, which was made by Judge Samuel I Rosenman after & study tour of the war stricken continent. Instead, Dr. Gillie would increase farm production (it has been highest in history for the last three years) through increasing farm manpower and mae chinery and abblishing or changing such food agencies as the office of price administration. Here is what he says on the latter subject: “president Truman on May 2 terminated the duties ahd office of civilian defense. Why not termis nate or change some of ‘the duties of those agencies affecting our food shortages, Mr. President, by the
same action?
than bloody boodle. al. |torship as cold, hard and brutal
and uncompromising now as it has been for 26 years and no puerile * “ |diplomacy of “yes, yess yes” will
the psychiatric quacks a
mw ; , 2 par... "I'm sure I didn't offend your parents, dear, with my.little explana: 1. tion of the. purpose of social fresno k es oh with
-
leave the democracies anything but a severe headache, and a host of civil wars and revolutions for their | appeasement policy. Dictators brobk no opposition. They lay down their terms and demand acceptance, That has been and will he the way of all negotiations with Russia. There i no use to have any fond delusions of harmony with a political system which has no moral or ethical standards, nor pretends to have,
nity are to prevail in international relations, the democracies will have to provide it and enforce it.
” » “SOMETHING SHOULD BE SAID” By IL H., Mt, Comfort
So far as I know, it has not been mentioned before, but it is to be expected that when a fad comes in or goes out, there are always comments, and certainly something should be said about all those. little square mustaches that are so rapidly disappearing. 1 have observed no fad that has made so sudden an. exit, :
DAILY THOUGHT And: he brought me to the door of the court: and when I looked,
og || behold » hole in the wall—Ee-
a»
. wht ld
Arp d
security—they look prepared rapt Eo
Ve iy
If right, justice and human dig-|"
"Cut Out or Revise Regulations “LET'S CUT OUT or revise the regulations of the
administration and the war food administration that furnish the red tape and overlapping restrictions’ on
intérfere with the raising of an adequate fodd supply.”
which appeared at some length in the appendix of the Congressional Record, by his new secretary. He is R. C. Prickett, editor and publisher of The New Era, a weekly newspaper at Albjon, Ind. “It was with a great deal of interest that I read he report of Samuel I. Rosenman, special adviser and legal counsel to the late President Roosevelt, as it was submitted to President Truman on ‘Monday, April 30,” the Gillie insertion began. : “The report dealt with the civillan food supply situation. It’ stated simply that the people of the United States would haye to pull their belts tighter so that the hungry and war-ridden people of libs erated areas in northwestern Europe could eat.
Disagree With ‘Philosophy of Scarcity
“PERHAPS MR. ROSENMAN'S report is true. But, I believe, the American people will object to his statements. They do not believe that belt-tightening is the right answer to the problem. si “They arq sympathetic toward the people of the world who face starvation. They want to help feed them. But they disagree with the reasoning that the people of this nation must be denied food so that the world ean be fed. al “This feeling is particularly true among the farme ers in Indiana and the Midwest. They sternly disa«. . If administration
agriculture adjustment administration, office of price
production and distribution which only perplex and |
Mild-mannered Dr. Gillie was aided in this attack, |
ap
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