Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1945 — Page 10
The Indianapolis Times
“PAG E 10 ‘Monday, June 11, 1945
ROY W. HOWARD = WALTER LECKRONE President, : . Editor - ’ Business Manager
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—— @
DANGEROUS DELAY POSTPONEMENT of the Big Three meeting is dangerous. President Truman says he hopes it can be held ‘within | 40 days. This is too much*delay. If unsettled allied dis- | putes continue to pile up at the rate of the last 40 days, the | situation by mid-July will be very bad indeed. Of course it is not the President's fault. trying for weeks to get such a meeting. When regular channels didn’t work, it was taken up personally with | Foreign Commissar Molotov and Foreign Secretary Eden | who were in this country. Then the President sent special envoys to. Moseow-and London. u u u = un x EVEN APART from the latest emergencies in Dig Three relations; courtesy alone should have brought prompt acceptance to the President's proposal. The tragic circum- | stances under which he tock office, and the fact that so much of the late President Roosevelt's communication with | Prime Minister Churchill and Marshal Stalin had been on a | personal plane, certainly was understood in Britain and’!
He has been
Russia. Nevertheless, Moscow stalled. called a general election in Britain. At the same time the long San Francisco “conferente deadlock gave opportunity | for more alibis. And finally the Russian-French demands | for a five-power conference on the Near East, and De | Gaulle's insistence that -he be added to any Big Three mee ing, offered more excuses for delay. But" these. Bible are inadequate. :
Then Mr. Churchill |
THE EMERGENCY in Big Three relation: is terribly real. It is getting worse—regardless of belated. Moscow acceptance of the virtually unanimous San Francisco recog- | nition of the right of free discussion by the world security | council. Russia’s continuing violations of the Yalta agraeinents on Poland and on joint protection of liberated countries pending free elections, plus dispute over control and treat-
ment of Germany, are“undermining the entire basis. of !
allied unity. If Big Three co-operation is one-half as essential to peace as those -governments say it is—and | most Americans believe ‘it is—nothing should be allowed to prevent a meeting promptly. We hope the President will not be content to accept | six weeks more delay, but will insist on action now. At least | let the responsibility be clear.
REPUBLICAN SUICIDE
HE senate finance committee has voted, 10 to 9, to cut |
the heart out of the house-approved bill to extend the reciprocal trade agreements, law for three years. Seven Republican senators and three Democrats made | up the majority which struck from the bill, as it will go before the ‘senate next week, authority to reduce tariff rates 50 per cent below present levels through negotiations * with other nations. Fortunately, the three Democrats will not find many members of their party agreeing with them on the senate floor. But with so large a number of senators away from Washington, it is possible that Republicans can muster enough strength to beat the attempt that will be made to | restore the bill to its original form. If they win such a | “victory,” we predict that the Republican party will long | regret it. » » » » ~ n FOR THE PEOPLE of this country are not for economic isolation. Governor Dewey is one of the many | Republican leaders, outside of congress, who see that | clearly and proclaim it boldly. New York Thursday night, Mr. Dewey proposed a sevenpoint program for American leadership in promoting world trade and preventing post-war economic strife. seventh point, he called for reducing tarifts
the renewed reciprocal trade agreement act _ when the! congress completes action upon it.’
The people will not easily forgive Republicans in the |
senate if they defeat that hope by keeping out of the bill adequate authority to further reduce tariffs.
POST-WAR TAX POLICIES EMBERS of the house Republican tax study committee are right, we think, in urging an early decision on post-war federal tax policies. . As President Truman has said, be reduced until Japan is beaten. - Hancock report said 16 months ago— “At current tax rates, few new enterprises could repay their borrowings out of earnings less Laxes In any reasonable period of time. There wili be general agreement that tax rates should be reduced. after the However, until it is definitely that are to he reduced, the launching of new enterprises and the expansion of existing ones will be deferred. We mend, therefore; that a post-war tax be drafted now, during the war, the énd of the war.” Against that recommendation ‘it has been contended that the. future is. uncertain—that congress should wait to see what post-war ‘conditions are before it can enact a post-war tax law, But waiting only adds to the uncertainty of the future, forces deferment of business decisions to launch or expand job-providing enterprises, creates unnecessary danger that post-war conditions ‘be bad.
But as the Baruch-
wal.
kKiown post-war taxes
law
THE BUTT SITUATION < A NEW YORK tobacco company reports that women now buy 69 per cent of the cigarets sold to civilians. Fuythermore, having made a study of cigaret butts discarded in public places, the company reveals that their average length is 134 inches, although it maintains that a 23-inch cigaret can be smoked down to ‘the last three-quarters of an inch without danger of burned fingers. In other words, this.is a wonderful country where many and 4 fore ‘woniéh spend 1 a vast amount of tinie, energy
HENRY W. MANZ
deliv= | ered by carrier, 20 cents |
U. 8 possessiotis, Cahada |
t-1 | will, |
Making a fine speéch in
In the “as we have | done in recent years and as we shall continue to do under |
TeCom- |
and put on the shelf to go into effect at |
and will |
| = REFLECTIONS —" | Bedlam By Anton Scherrer
YEARS AGO Arthur Christopher , Benson wrote an essay, big with +, ™ thesis, 4n the course of. which he develighd the idea thai the perception of beauty 18 essentially an’ individual thing, and: that the canons of what are called good taste are of all things the most shifung:. In this department of behavior (he went on to say) the danger of dogmatism is very great, because the more that a man indulges the rapturous perception of the beauty that appeals to- himself the
i | | | 1 | |
| more likely he is to believe that there is no beauty |
outside of his own perceptions.
To support his thesis, Mr. Benson submitted the |
| discovery that there is no temptation so strong tor the aesthetic nature, as to deride and contemn the. beauty of the art we have just outgrown. And for fear that the reader might not get his point, he furnished an illustration in the shape of two beds. Once upon a time, said Mr. Benson, there were a lot of positive people in this world who derided the stiffness and austerity of Queen Anne beds, with the | result that somebody went thg limit in the way of
| imagination and invented the Victorian bed. A gen-
eration passed. Then everybody grinned sheepishly and lugged the florid Victoriah beds to the attic. Sure, Queen Anng beds were re-instated.- Another generation passed. Then—just as suddenly—the sane positive people had an asthetic urge to sleep in Vic~ torian beds again It all.came back to me the other night when I read Roger Budrow's front page story of the proposed Victorian restoration of English hotel-on-the-Circle. " oo ¥ ~
Experience :
NOT SO LONG ago E. E. Clsiiming. the bitter novel, “The Enormous Room,” question: . “Why don’t our poets and painters and composers and-so forth glorify the war effort?” It's a good question. The best answer thus far comes from Sgt. Selden Rodman, editor-on-leave of “Common Sense,” who says: “All serious war poetry is anti-war poetry. And then he reminds us that: “Some of the best war poetry has been -written by poets who have never been near a battle field— witness Thomas Hardy, Rilke, Rimbaud.” It’s the gospel truth. Indeed, I sometimes wonder whether any man—author or artist—profits by experience the way the high-brows would have us believe. Consider Herman Melvide and Jonah, if you Melville never got within a hundred yards of a live whale and turned in the best fish story ever written. Jonah wrote Te worst. For a man who was on the inside, Jonah's storyv-was a flop.
author of
Criticism | BY THIS TIME 1 am reasonably convinced that | modern criticism refletts two schols of thought (if it deserves that distinction). { ceeds on the theory that the reader knows nothing; the other, that the reader knows everything. | don't mind: saying that of the two, the assumption | of my omniscience embarrasses me the most. . Not content to explain the unfamiliar in terms of | the familiar, this brand of critics ‘stays up nights | How thinking up terms less famiilar than the unta- | miliar things they are talking about." Their approach is more or less the same and usually takes this turn: “Marguerite Young's “Angel in
the Forest” has the spiritual content of a lily painted |
| by Georgia O'Keefe. Another example: have been expected, James Thurber's latest book has the burr of a Pablo Picasso print.” I have survived these precious examples, but just | to show you that the practice is as pernicious as { ever I submit another I picked up just an hour ago
| journal, to wit: ‘Premier Joseph Stalin was heard to | say the other day that Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse | has attained the stature of Charlie Chaplin.”.
Maybe, it's all right, but ‘who in heck is Charlie | Chaplin?
“* WORLD AFFAIRS— Capital
bis 4 , By Wm. Philip Simms
"oR 1
SAN FRANCISCO, June 1l.— | Before the conference adjourns it | will likely establish an interim com- | mission composed of all the 50 nations. Its job will be to recom- ! mend solutions for problems still unsolved.
a
Perhaps the biggest and most difficult of these will | be the selection of a site for the new league of nations | generate even more heat than the |
capital. It may ‘battle of the veto and take longer to decide. Apparently afraid of ghosts of their own creation, some of the great powers want to stay away from Geneva, seat of the old league. “past.” so many errors of other days.
| it might cost votes when the new charter comes up for ratification. There are still those in the United States senate to whom the very name is anathema.
‘Russia Is Adamant Against Swiss
RUSSIA IS ADAMANT against the Swiss site for |
two reasons: First, she and Switzerland had a falling out years ago. over the killing of a Communist there. Since: then, Moscow has taken the position that Switzerland is “anti-Soviet.” Secondly, after her war against Finland, Russia was expelled from the old league and that, quite naturally, still rankles. France is against Geneva because Switzerland is | what the French call a “permanent neutral.” True, the Roosevelt idea was that the new league should he “open to all peace-loving states.” And it would now
a nation should be regarded as not “peace-loving” because it did not go to war. But France holds that hereafter the right of passage to league troops must be accorded by all members, hence there can be no such thing as neutrality. Instead of Geneva, France proposes a site near Lake Geneva but territory The Soviet Union favors Vienna or some capital within Jer sphere of influence. But practically every one of the United Nations is more or less v candidate. Mexico City, Rio de Janeiro, Lima, The Hague and other famous beauty-spots in both hemispheres, have been mentioned as, of course, | ‘Washington. Florida, Philadelphia and the Black Hills of South Dakota.
| Geneva Would Seem Most Suitable
%* FOR OBVIOUS REASONS, however, Ge seem to be the most suitable. Privately this is widely admitted here, | are the spooks which haunt its marble halls, Millions of dollars have beeh spent on specially designed buildings to House the ‘world organization and its related activities. It has an excellent library, amphitheatres, committee rooms, vast storage space for in-
retariat. But Geneva would seem to be out of the running. With their extraordinary veto powers, anyone of the Big Five can remove the old league site from the list, That being the case, many here f cisco or its environs would be close to ideal.
San Francisco makes @ sort of international half-way house—more so, oertainly, than anything either Europe or Asia could offer, It has land, sea and air ‘transportation facilities second to none. ‘Its commu-
‘of thie globe, is unsurpassed. Weather, scenery and native hospitality are the talk of the conference. k There ave # dozen spots around “$an Francisco
given international ‘status, policing and |
Jud wat and all. And nly no comparable site anywhere | the bale|
raised the
Anyway, one school pro- |
And I|
“As might.
: * | workers will hold all I was lifted from a contemporary Russian literary |
Like ladies with a | they seem relutanf to return to the scene of |
Some American delegates oppose Geneva ‘because |
| be a stran rony if—as on iplomat expresse fe] tax rates should not | °° ® ES Irons 8 Sip pressed
other
have |,
neva would |
“The most damning things against it |
valuable records and quarters for the permanent ‘sec-
feel that San Fran- |
On the edge of the Oceident, yet facing the Orient
nications system, in quick touch with every region
where an area like the District of Columbia could be
Merry ry GoRodndl #7" IROLITICAL SCENE=-
dT
Clear Voice By Thomas L. ; Stokes
WASHINGTON, June 11.—The Republican party, after some floundering around and some faltering steps backward, is suddenly showing signs of getting back, into the procession toward effective: international co= operation. = . : It i$ no “secret that some. progressive G. O. P. : | leaders had become discouraged lately particularly | after. the almost solid front of the party in the house | against the reciprocal tariff ‘bill's authority for seeking further tariff reductions in negotiations with other nations. , | ! This represented a retreat toward economic na- { tionalism in contrast with the party's steps the last two or three years toward international co- operation - . "through support of the Fulbright and Connally | resolutions in CONgress, the Mackinac declaration, ! and in party commitments of various kinds including | its platform.
| The Party Is Back in Line |' NOW THE PARTY in (he house is back in line with its general support of the Brefton Woods agree- | ments for an international bank and monetary fund, which passed. the house overwhelmingly. Instead of taking the advice of those who tried to get the partly to fight this phase of international co-operation, as on the tariff biil, the leadels on the banking and currency committee worked in co-operation ‘with. administration leaders to get some amendments they regarded as essential.. It was a fine example of teamwork. :
vi
times was followed significantly by a rallying call for co-operation in the international -economic field ° by the party's titular leader, Governor Dewey of New i York. . A The 1944 presidential candidate was not just making another speech. It was evident that he took the occasion of an address to a local seventh | war loan committee to warn his party and to bring it back in line with .the policy of international co- | operation along all fronts. economic as well ‘as | political, which’ he had stated so forcibly in hs campaign last year le, like others, was manifestly conse ious that the party was straying and was .taking a mistaken conse.
, ® Hoosier (“SEND WAR [WORKERS ov ERSEAS”
{By Ms. V..A. FF, Indianapolis
I read the conditions under which
servicemén will be discharged. 1 | think that, they are quite fair as fa: {as- the terms are concerned. but {there is one point about which I {heard a lot of argument but which 1 was never mentioned officially, | Though the deferred war workers {of military age_did agavonderful job on the home. front they had all the {breaks so far. They this country, -together with {families and most of them made {more money in a week than GI Joe made in a month. { Now most of them will not be { required for war production any {more and they will be the first ones {to be employed in reconversion in- | dustries. When the servicemen {finally ‘get home the former war the advantages |over them: job, greater experience, savings and | better nerves as their way of life {had not been changed essentially
{ I am sure that with a minimums
jof training ‘many former war {workers could relieve servicemen The German occupation army could | be chiefly formed by them and the {many activities in the Pacific could | be performed without a long mili{tary training and bring many a weary soldier home to his family. Why not give GI Joe a break |after all the sacrifices he Riade) | Many people will object that th |change would * cause too much trouble. But it would be fair and just and does not GI Joe himself go through a lot of trouble to restore justice in the world?
= 5 2
“TIME .TO TACKLE THE HOUSING PROBLEM” By J J L. Is it not about tine to housing problem in our city? When we see the many {evicting tenants from their homes tnere must be something ‘wrong somewhere. It is a peculiar paradox when about 70 per cent of the people. namely tenants (who incidentaily are_lhe real are placed In an economic tion of being at the mercy of ( |
Indianapolis
tackle th
cdf [934
taxpayers) posiabout real et- the apathy,
15 per cent, the estate that is rented. A tenants are in a state of but beneath the surface are rumblings that can develop nw ma jor trouble for all of us, The tenants have not -as yet awakened to the fact of their tre- | mendous political and economic | powers. When they do awaken, Mr. Landlord will have a tremendous |
owners
Side Glances —By Galbraith wr
were safe in: their |
being established on a:
Governor's Speech Was Thorough
THE GOVERNOR'S . SPEECH was a thorough presentation of the necessity of economic co-opera= tion. He showed a fine appreciation of the part that economic maladjustments, bottlirfg up of trade | “SHOULD COMBAT by artificial barviers, the - rapid march toward CLASS HATRED” nationalism ‘all over the world after the last war, Br J Kk KX played in bringing on the present war. He knows Set that the political security organization being framed at San Francisco is not enough without economic co-operation. “All of the work Delt done at San Francisco will mean tragically little if economic conflict is to: divide the nations,” he said. He eame out boldly for a full- scale program to do this—a world econoinic conference to readjust tariffs and do away with trade barriers, the reciprocal tariff program, Bretton Woods, cancellation of world war I debts, repeal of the Johnson act prohibiting loans’ to nations in default on their first world war debts, prompt settiement of lend-lease obligations all around, and long-term stabilization of the dollar and the , pound in agreement with Great Britain. : He went the whole route of the administration's program and even beyond, pointing the way for his party.” =
Comes at an o Anptoprisle Time "GOVERNOR DEWEY'S appeal, which took a high consumers to buy, thereby decreas-| te of non-partisanship, comes at an appropriate ing sales and employment. time, just in advance qf consideration by the senate Hitler also created hatred against | of the reciprocal tariff bill and Bretton Woods banks by talking about the “poor.” | measures. 4 > The more people make and have |, There, ‘in the senate, will be the decisive battle. 'the more they can deposit in banks The senate will be watched closely, at home and ‘and pay loans and’ interest. there-| gj; gyer the world, for its decision on international ants, but one can observe by the | fore bankers are <incerely interested economic co-operation. For later it, and it alone, attitude of property owners that! the prosperity of every citizen| yi; Lave (he decision on ratification of the San
} ro y it 1s not far distant. ni? their commugity. | Francisco charter, with which the other two are so Bankers ld combat class hatred by ing citizens to adopt
i Let us denounce any evictions ¢1 tightly linked. : any tenant, excepting for' non-pay- : Republicans, and Demograts, too, might benefit y vin bung Pay- rporation business methods by ad- p e vising citizens to deposit their in-|
ment of rent or, willful destruction from what Governor Dewey had to say. come, pay their expenses with
“I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.”
Forum
(Times readers are invited to express their these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250° words. Letters must be signed: ~ Opinions set forth here are those of the writers,
views in Indianapolis Hitler achieved power by creating | class hatred between employees and employers by talking about “workers” as though employers who nearLy sweat blood during poor- business | times trying to meet payrolls, pay loans, taxes, ‘insurance, sell mer{chandise in severe competition and collect for merchandise manu- | factured and delivered, were not | workers. The more pay employees | receive the more they can buy em- | ployers’ products. Thereford em- | ployers are sincerely interested fin | paying employees as much. as pos-| | sible. But they also realize that in‘creased pay must always be added to costs which-must be paid by con-|-sumers and make 1t less possible for
and publication in no way implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. The
Times. assumes no responsibility for the return of manu-scripts-and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)
and so will some Of our: The tenants are in the great majority. It 1s -about time that our state assembly and our council start enacting legisia- | tion that will give this majority their natural rights. As yet there has been no formation of an association for the protection of the
higadache, politicians
cily
This recognition of party responsibility in tliese x
of property, otherwise no evictions ichecks and reserve for.income tax
Under the present system some olks are paying prohibitory prices : 10iks Days 1 yp and other contingencies with a reiserve checking account.
for property, then requesting ten2} ants to move so they may occupy | these premises. Such procedure: is 5 1s not for the common good. “THE SPIRIT 3 OF AMERICA” By D M.. Indianapolis
. 5 4 “AND RUSSIA DISPOSES What 1s the matter With the By H. § 8. representatives at the United The ‘Nations conference? Are they vel-! low? The Americas, Canada, EthiOSE nd God disposes,” is “The opia and the Malays are looking to United States proposes ail and Russia us for leadetship. Our fighting And the latest problem men's valor is unquestioned. If we Russia has disposed for the accept this leadership and hold out United Stales is this post-war mili- for the things our people want us tary training proposition, to hold out for, we shall he the It will be remembered that many greatest power for good in all hisin igs nation did not want, tory. ignorant enough still We shall be a power so siroiig| post-war military that none of the world's bullies But now Russia is will dare to oppose us as long as upon .a vast post-war. we are right. If we stoop to power Russia's post-war period) politics, we'll be just another bully and .a scared one at that. The rest are just as sick of war as we are and not as strong, providing] we're right. An impartial plebiscite is the |
Indianapolis U modern political = counterpart of the old saying, “Man pro-
15POSES
groups in lact are nog to wan training. launching (This is program. It would be national suicide fo us now to refuse to react quite dynamically to Russia's action. Yes! as much as we like Russia, as much as we like any nation, we cannot only fair, way to determine who! afford it to get the jump on us by. shall rule a country. Once decided, way of military preparation. That the big powers should use their | is, if we want to maintain our own power to see to it that the smaller | nation ruled by ourselves. | countries dre unmolested. That! TTT is the spirit of America:
“FIRST MEN TO
on French |
| {
|
ENLIST FORGOTTEN” By A GL, Overseas
Do you recall in the fall of 1940 the demand for men? They had to be absolutely perfect physically, | no dependents, etc, in order to be accepted for the call to arms. | We who enlisted: then “disregarded our personal affairs, parents and sweethearts. In return we were branded “regular army.” : Sincé the day I departed from | that grand old civilian life, the army has had full power over my daily routine and location. Certainly IT was far from a slacker when enlisting. I"assure you the monthly sum of $21 did not entice me. Fifty-five months’ service — or 4 four years and seven months in the army--and only 71 points, Now that our government sees fit to leave millions of men out of the army, we who enlisted at the very beginning are forgotten. No average person has rejoiced or benefited from his or her service except the honor of standing for America.
DAILY THOUGHT
' Nevertheless if thou warn the righteous man, that the righteous | sin not, and he doth not sin, he | shall surely live, because he is warned; also thou hast delivered 4 °| | thy soul. Ezekiel 3:21.
Gere says. he'll-be the first: ore in town to buy a eleven sot ekg vars 10 yon what sort of ¢ ny look peop! 2% Hot
tor
| rate of “9 ! pay everf when hauling British or French troops.
DOST thou Tove life? “do ti, Fr
-n
IN’ WASHING TON—
Suez Canal Tolls By Paul R. Leach
WASHINGTON, June 11.—Negotiations ‘have been
opened by the foreign economic administration to have Britain and France charge Suez canal tolls for our naval and military vessels to reverse lend-lease, U. S. warships, army transports and shipping administration freighters that ply the” Suez now pay those tolls in cash despite the fact that they carry men and supplies designed to defeat Japan and help liberate enemy-held British and French territory. Although Britain and its dominions now “reverse lend=lease” other services and supplies for our troops, British ships on war business still fraverse the | Panama canal without charge—that i# on lend-lease account. Even since the Mediterranean was cleared for a shortcut.from the U. 8. to India and China, the disadvantage in canal toils has been a source of irritation to the American government and congress. This has become acute enough, since our large scale
| receloyment of men and supplies from Europe to Asia, | to prompt congressional suggestions that this govern-
ment seek retaliation.
We Pay for British, French Troops
TOLL COSTS are enormous. Every- liberty ship going through the 100-mile Suez canal pays approximately $4000, paying €0 cents a net ton loaded, 72 cents a ton in ballast. : Passengers, including troops, are assessed at the ench francs (20 cents) a head, which we
The Suez Caral Co. has its own way of figuring tolls. Every merchani ship afloat receives a canal certificate when commissioned stating its toll, loaded and empty. The navy, however, does not supply tonnage figures to the company. - Hence tolls for warships are assessed and billed to Washington. The navy checks the charges against actual tonnage and pays what it figures Is fair. The army an d the war shipping .administration here pay as billed.
Government Owns 7/16th of Shas
THE PANAMA CANAL was constructed by the United States government and is managed by the war department. Hence it is a simple matter to lendlease British ships through to the Pacific or vice versa.
The Suez canal was buiit by private capital and is
manged. by a company predominantly French. The British: government has cited this private management of a public utility as reason for not charging off the tolls to reverse lend-lease. wever, the British government owns 7-16 of the company shares and of 10 British directors three represent the government. Twenty-one directors are French civilians and one 18 Dutch. With continual dredging necessary, the upkeep of Buez is, expensive but its profits are said to very large. The canal and its revenue collections revert to the Egyptian goverment: in 1968, 99 years after its completion. One of the ironies of Suez canal opération in recent history—as if J° were nothing unusual—was the fact thal Mussolini had to pay 10 francs a head when
his troops moved through for the conquest of Ethi-
opia and back.
Copyeigur, as hy The Indianapolis Dimes and * Chicago" Daily News, Inc
To The Point—
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Church Meetin
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Name Miss El cently wa the Rocke:
————
