Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1945 — Page 5
\Y 9, 1045
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A the | conference of | sued President | Internae | ‘heatrical Stage |
WEDNESDAY, MAY 0;
1045"
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| Invasion of Japan Planned
By Allied Chiefs of Staff MAN SUSPENDED
{Continued From. Page One)
pressure applied by land, sea and
l. air power with eventual complete
destruction,” he said. Nimitz said he was anticipating the shifting of large forces from Europe to the Pacific and’ said his command was endeavoring to obtain areas to support them. He said Okinawa, at the threshold
"of the Japanese homeland, was the
most important island yet invaded by the American forces. Despite losses to Japanese. suicide planes, "he said the campaign was going according to plan. % Hammer Defenses Five American divisions are ham-
mering at Japanese defenses across
the southern end .of the island a mile north of the capital, Naha. On Tarakan the allied invasion lightened a pincers on Pamovesian oilfield east of Targkan town and closed in on Bjoeata oil field three miles north of the captured Tarakan afrdrome, “American troops pushing out from liberated Davao on Mindanao island in the Philippines were driving the Japafese back into the hills,
Philippines- -based -aerial forces | continued widespread attacks| through: the Southwest Pacific and into the Central ‘Pacific. Navy patrol bombers from the Okinawa area sank 14,000 tons of shipping and damaged 3500 in..a series of attacks in Korean: copstal
‘waters Monday.
Ctrgo Ships Sunk Other patrol bombers sank two small cargo ships, a .large fishing vessel and a coastal cargo ship off southern Honshu yesterday. American forces on northern Luzon continued gains toward Balete pass, gateway to Cagayan valley where most of Japan's remaining
forces on the island are concen-
trated. Chinese forces killed more than 3000 Japanese forces in a battle west of Hsihsiakow in Honan provinge,
U-BOAT TO GIVE UP LONDON, May 9 (U, P.).—The first U-boat to surrender under Germany's capitulation agreement will put into Weymouth harbor on the English coast late today, it wad announced,
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THIRD A.P. NEWS
Action. Linked to to Story on German Surrender. (Continued From Page One)
supreme headquarters press relatioris officer, had announced that Brunnelle had been suspended ‘as an accredited correspondent of SHAEF “pending an investigation of” his filing of an unauthorized
* Iflash through his bureau.”
Kennedy, who admitted he “had violated SHAEF regulations by filing the Reims dispatch before its release. was authorized, said he telephoned it to London where Brunelle is in charge of the A. P.
Kennedy and Morton Gudebrod, who supervises the ‘distribution of A. P. news to the French press, have been suspended from filing | privileges. SHAEF has appointed | three officers to investigate Kennedy’s action but they have not reported yet. \ Breach of Confidence A message from Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's ‘headquarters, explaining the reason for the action against Kennedy, was received by Kent Cooper,. executive director of the A. P. It read: “Suspension filing privileges Associated Press revoked and authority now granted” correspondents other than Ed Kennedy to submit ma-
Investigation filing story by Kennedy continues and report results of |
| message with a request that Ken- that of the Associated Press in
'nedy be allowed to state his case distributing the story throughout | personally. He also asked supreme Europe before the release time that {headquarters to state its position oa had been agreed upon not only. put the questoin of « whether military|a premium .on dishonesty but also security wad iriyolved in the filing put a brake upon free covefage of by Kennedy of “the unauthorized | 1 dispatch. ' the future. “All but two correspondents who! “The bulk of the correspondents. attended: a meeting at SHAE} at SHAEF signed the letter to Gen.| vesterday voted to ask Eisenhower | | Eisenhower, declaring that in their | to restore .the ban on .the A. P. 's | opinion the Associated Press had filing: ‘privileges throughout. the | behaved very badly and that the, European theater of operations for only. people whose freedom to re-| a 24-nour period. * _; |pert the news had béen infringed The A. P, men at SHAEF were those who kept their word did not participate in the voting.|and followed the rules.” “The ones who declined to vote Violated Pledge in the affirmative were Larry Rue| - of the Chicago Tribune and John Ib Seems pretty well established, or ‘Connell of the Bangor (Me. the New York Herald-Tribune said News. leditorially today, “that Edward In a letter to Eisenhower, the| Kennedy, chief of the Associated correspondents described Kennedy's press bureau in Paris, deliberately
action as “the most disgraceful, de-| violated a pledge in filing ahead of liberate and unethical ‘double cross! {time his story of the German .sur-
in the history of journalism.” 2nder.”
Secrecy Pledged ° | The editorial said that “what is Esenhower replied to the corre-|a little hard to understand is that spondents’ petition to have the je pg rg Tha Jean {ban on. the entire A. P. staff in ja statement in which it chose to +Europe restored, by saying that only refer to the Kennedy story as a the war department in Washington | ‘news beat—acclaimed .by editors could punish an entire American | throughout the United States as organization. {one of the greatest in newspaper Boyd D. Lewis, Eiropeas news | history.’ manager of the United Press, said | “let us differentiate” Brig. Gen. ‘Allen pledged 16 corre- [from such chorus. i spondents in the plane on the way . Decision Not Wise to Reims to abide by SHAEF) ...) 40ment should be with regulations and not to release their|, , "po" cue” rom Mr. ‘Ken dispatches until authorized to do dy’ ibility to” hi 1 so. Kennedy was in the plane and ys. sSponsiiy-iiy 0 HS o> did snot dissent from the pledge, ledgues and to the sanctity of the Lewis said. | Telease — without which modern Inewspaper reporting would be al-
|
ourselves
histori¢ events in thé _Burope of
to keep his mouth shut until it was {opened officially and that, instead {of being ashamed for violating a
finding will be communicated to! you as soon as practicable.” "The first senterice in the Eisen-! however message was a referefice (| EL the fact ‘that SHAEF at first| Jeopardizing Freedom suspended all -filing privileges. for| - “His fellow correspondents, howthe A: P. throughout the European | ever; take a different view. theater of operations. That later These working newspaper men and { was lifted to apply only to. Kennedy. | women rejected the idea that -in {Then Gudebrod and Bunnelle' were | this instance the army was jeopar- | suspended. | dizing freedom of- the press and Cooper replied to. the Eisenhower! held that Rentetlys action and
fundamental tenet in journalism's | [code of ethics, he was proud of {what he did.
| Local Plants Turning Out Weapons for Use in Pacific
Eli Lilly & Co, world-known | pharmaceutical concern, feels there | decisfon to end production of the | win be very littl#® decrease now in [F3. With Nie Svo Apa en) its war orders. There might even € he an increased demand for prod(used in the Bell P-63 Kingcobra. | oc ceq in combatting tropical “ More Workers diseases. Lilly is expanding its The reduction in Allison's work- foreign business, with the formation | week will prevent any layoffs, due of six new export companies, and {to the cutbacks. Later, as the jet|that, coupled with the development | engine goes into heavy ‘production of new products, is expected to offit may be necessary to lengthen the set cancellation of war orders when
(Continued From Page One)
l'work-week, officials sav. “We will the Japs also give up.
Are Now in Effect!
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need many hundreds of more work-{ Link-Belt is making chaia drives ers by the end of the year,” a'that go on the amphibious tank, spokesman - said. © The General | called “Water Buffalo” and “Alliga Motors division employs about tor.” Stewart-Warner is starting 14,000 now, about 10000 fewer than!to turn out rockets for navy air-, a year ago. Production at the Curtiss-Wright propeller plant here now is concentrated on propellers for’ large bombers and transports, such as the C-46 Commando which operates | over the “hump” in the China-
ing rocket tubes and acetylene] equipment for “on-the-spot” ship | repairs. The Prest+O-Lite Battery | Co. is making aircraft and truck batteries. . More Bearings
| Burma-India theater. Smaller muck engines are a big item at | propellers for the Curtiss P-40 War- International Harvester's plant { hawk and Lockheed P-38 Lightning | here, while Marmon-Herrington
{ were made here earlier in the war. Big Demand : Among the many war items in | production at P. R. Mallory & Co. | are at least two vitally needed ih | the Pacific campaign. The tropical
also is busy on truck work. Sch er-Cummins makes pumps and for many uses.
factory. { To help whip the shortage of
dry cell battery + which powers | bearings, two plants are expanding. ! handie-talkies and walkie-talkies They are MecQuay-Norris and and silver-bonded aircraft engine! Americar Bearing~""
| bearings are¥expected to be in big demand until the end cf the war.
The war | reported that the Indianapolis of-Lukas-Harold Corp., which op- | fice has orders on hand for 11614 | exates the navy-owned ordnance | workers to staff local war plants. | plant on the east side of the city, { Of this number 3642 jobs can be | expects to keep busy making | filled by women workets, The WMC| | Norden bombsights and other pre-| has more than 20,000 Jobs open |
planes to fire, Prest-O-Life is mak- |
t2-, Electronic Labora- |
tories is a big suppiler of electric equipment, as is the big R. C. A.
manpower commission,
h "of Raymo Daniell in a dispatch : nn amr ned trom Par to the New York Times| 0% Impossible tier io grave liberate violation SHAEF regu. Hedy sive he meror promised Rts in & ern bere Tos lations and. breach confidence. 3 public duty to convey the news and
his equally serious public duty to avoid irresponsible or damaging disclosure. With a war only half-won and at a moment when serious -issues of policy might have been affectedsby his personal decision one cannot feel that Mr. Kennedy solved
| that dilemma wisely.”
|
|
Believe Sorting Argentina Prevents Hemisphere Split ©
(Continued From Page One) i
ready a wide “variety of -states— | | totalitarian ‘dictatorships, republics, | {monarchies, and some which are | not yet even states because ey} are not sovereign. And few of them {practice democracy as we under- | stand that term. But above all, Latin Americans | say, admission of Argentina means| restoration of hemisphere solidarity, | and the net gain from that alone outweighs almost any other conisid{eration Inter-Ameriean solidarity, Mex] ico’s Foreign Minister Ezekiel Padille. told me today, is an object lesson to all nations at San Francisco. “The Americas,” he said, hi the greatest admiration for. : many fine qualities possessed . other parts of the globe. But on the whole there is nothing any-, where to compare with the unity, the neighborliness, the democratic spirit and ‘the mutual helpfulness which characterize the relationship between the countries of, the western hemisphere.”
Hemisphere Lucky That about sums up what I have | heard from others. Today more than any tilne in the past, there is
deep appreciation of all Americans
north and south, of how lucky we are not to be cursed with such| feuds as have caused wars in other parts .of the world for 2000 years. So American delegations here are pleased to have Argentina back in the fold. Within Argentina, it - is said, there are. those who would like to see their country lead a South American bloc in opposition to a| North American bloc—not a ma-| jority but a powerful faction. 1 This is nothing new. It dates|
A
j clslon instruments which the navy terms “fire control.”
throughout the state. The. job is far from done.
oF
: . 0 . o: vo a8 good neighbor policy in’ Acapulco Priendliness knows no borders. Down beyond the Rio. Grande, the friendly {avitation Have a Coke meets the same warm response as here at home. It's a gracious form of friendliness that is understood and welcomed i in any clime,” in any laiguage. Your American fighting man knows that to offer Coca-Cola : is an international passport to refreshment aad friendly companionship in ‘ many foreign lands: sotmeD wm atmo or the oer. £014 company ”"
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back a number of decades. They!
drew their inspiration, not: om the new. world, but:from .the old.| and they tend to copy old world | | institutions, sore ‘of which aré not! of“ the best. ! { National Pride Is Factor Had Argentina been “forced 0 = remain apart from the rest of the, | Americas—especially “after she had
made costly efforts to régain her place within the family—sheer | pride would have sent her off on a course which might have disrupted the hemisphere’'s prized unity. She! would have done her best to- win others over to her side, and sim-ilar-minded nationalists throughout the Americas might have helped her. The result would have been an, America divided against herself as Europe is divided against itself— a, balance of power system such! as has plunged Europe into one | war after another. That, Latin Americans are say-| ing, is what so many critics seem to have overlooked when the Ar-| gentine question came up, first at Mexico City, then here. ob
(CANTEEN COUNCIL
TO MEET TONIGHT
. A meeting of the city-wide teencanteen council. will be held tonight in my council chambers at city hall. | A report of the dance given re-| cently at Tomlinson hall will be| made. Plans will be completed for | the bowling tournament finals and formation of a softball league.
DUKE TO VISIT NEW YORK PALM BEACH, Fla. May 9 (U. {P.).—~The Duke: and Duchess of | | Windsor, who, have been visiting | | here since leaving the former king's | post as governor of the Bahamas,
{today prepared to leave by train | ah
for New York and Canada.
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