Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1945 — Page 12

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ALTHOUGH Molotov rejected the co recent request out of hand, the thereafter eased somewhat. more quickly, and for a Hardly any cuts were

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during Christmas week minute to waste, capable of neither anger nor love. g is a fine for instance,

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From them we get the impres- |

to bring back a longer

- work week in the face of rising unemployment; to main-

management has committed

the corporation to industrial war all along the industrial | Vonnegut boys. s markets by selling sweated

to charge the consumer what-

to turn the clock back to the days

of tame plant or company unions, helpless against the ; to

with the atomic bomb, to the blackout of St

” ONSIDER the following assertions in a week-end state-

public, having a big stake in the General Motors

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ment by Walter P. Reuther, vice president of the C. L | believing that Christmas wasn't worth cele!

The corporation's spokesmen have seemed to us need-

lessly cold and brusque,

“Plainly, General Motors

ican industrial production with disorganized labor; and, | people would ha

much more alert to the fact that the unionized employees | de it difficult to ea

sion that the General Motors management could well be | itself. . at home by spiraling inflation. That is the road to World | 92 how well

ries, On the other hand, there certainly has been no lack

of heat in the union's outgivings.

tain on a relief subsistence basis a large pool of unemgoods for American dollars made cheaper abroad and dearer

are human beings with very human problems and worfront—war to break the back of organized labor, both craft

strength of great employing groups;

and industrial unions; ployed to hold down wages; finally, to capture the world’

derstanding of the issues.

war III and

civilization.

* violence, but words have flown thick and fast. Unfortu- | more

0. auto workers and director of the strike:

* ever the traffic will bear

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: 3 HEAT FROM MR. REUTHER

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Ey : Thus far there has been a welcome absence of physical il nately they have, we think, contributed little to public un-

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General Motors am That by adopting a warmer,

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, that type of argument may be convi and successful by follo

e largest company in an i

It is not to us. That the

has faults is undeniable. more sympathetic and co-operative attitude toward its

employees, their needs and aspirations, the éatyurikion

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WANT to get along with our principal allies in the and security.

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JUST AMONG FRIENDS We

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Rh Be AFFAIRS — Nazis’ Tal © J By Corl D. Groat

peace It is so essential that the United States, Russia and ~ Britain get together and stay together that we aren't

going to be very hard to get al

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ong with. And we haven't

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talk things over.

_ But it would be much, much easier for us to do business with Russia if ‘she would quit acting the rough, tough | §

guy and sit down at the table and

pout, sulk and walk out 't Jbelo e ng to her has its discon- | for an aggressive

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Foreign Minister Bev hat demands, if any, “they |

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As for our British cousins, for territory and bases.”

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United States to state exact]

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territorial demands.

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Mr, Bevin kn that direction, too. He also terest of his country as ours

mostly barren rocks of ed that during the late war, if

purposes.

i We want certain bases, yes, value other than for defensive knows it is as much to the in

that we get them. He legrn

: Just about what we want in ‘he didn’t know it before,

documentary confirma-

killings and terroristic regimes

n camps. Meantime here are some democratic effects this

process and other allied actions are

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Allan L. Swim's articles on “Dixie Disru

The Russians may feel it is + Double-talk i + But both the British and the i more from us than we are from starting

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