Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 April 1946 — Page 12

“PAGE 12 Tuesday, April 16, 1946 . |. ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ OEE Editor. Business Manager eo (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) : ~~ Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co, 214 W. Maryland st. Postal Zone 9. 7 ; Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of Circulations. ! ! « Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy: delivered by carrier, 30 cents a week. Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a

Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

~JUVENILE COURT JUDGE * 49 EPUBLICAN voters will select from among four candiAN dates the nominee of their party for juvenile court judge. There is only one Democratic aspirant for the nomination in the May 7 primary. : _ This post is one of the most important of those for which ballots will be cast next month. The man who holds that position will play an important part in eaging youth‘fil humanity and in demonstrating to children” as well as to the community that justice in Marion county is fair as well as firm, sympathetic rather than punitive. The four candidates from whom the Republicans will choose must be weighed on perhaps undemonstrated merits. The Times is unqualifiedly opposed to renomination of the {ncumbent, Judge Mark Rhoads. + Juvenile court must be above politics. Its first function is to serve the community by handling cases of juvenile delinquency in such a manner that character building will be placed above punishment in all but the most hardenéd cases. But, and this is an important qualification, character building can be accomplished only through continuing supervision of children who have passed through the court, and by employment of professional workers who have qualifica-

.tions other than political influence or mere kindliness. ~ ” »

c. » - HE juvenile court judge must be genuinely interested in the problems of youth, or else he will not be able to check the many careers of crime that have their start in childhood delinquency. : The Democratic candidate, Joseph O. Hoffmann, and one Republican, Harold N, Fields, a war veteran recently returned from overseas, have been indorsed by the bipartisan juvenile court committee, a group which has been interested in the conduct of that court for many years. These men are pledged to use, if elected, the “best practices of juvenile court procedure that have been developed in outstanding juvenile courts throughout the country and which have proved most effective to help children in difficulty, whether in the category of delinquency or neglect.” We are impressed with the objective approach of the juvenile court committee, and their indorsement should carry great weight in the primary election. The committee believes that if the fall race is between the two men it has indorsed, Marion county will get a good judge, whichever wins, i! Above all, the court should be kept out of politics and out of the hands of men not qualified to operate it for the betterment of the community.

DRAFT POLITICS THE HOUSE put the cart before the horse when it voted to extend the draft and coyly provided for a five-month “holiday.” - - * The motive is clear: A five-month moratorium on selective service will carry the average representative past the date of his primary election. He will not have to bid for a two-year extension of his political life at the hands of parents whose sons are being drafted. ~~ ~~ Such action may serve the purpose of politicians, but it-contributes little to the sum total of statesmanship. And it.may be that those congressmen who are congratulating themselves on their political acumen in dodging a controversial issue will learn, in the next few months, that the piiblic views them with contempt. g 8 nn ys & , : F THE nation needs selective service—and it does—we deed it now. We need it to maintain our ‘armies of occupation in a still unsettled world. We need it to replace highpoint men who fought and won their war and who are entitled to return home. : ~ Fiye months hence, we may no longer need conseription. In five months, a conscientious congress, working with the war and navy departments, should be able to produce the formula for a volunteer military establishment—backed by universal training for youth. A wiser course would be to extend the draft for several months, and provide for its abandonment at a specified « date. The house did the reverse. In effect, congress is endorsing compulsion as a permanent part of our system of government. Bargaining

The Indianapolis Times]

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coming up soon, the public should know and you should tell us who whenever they feel like it. We have ‘was the prosecuting attorney and his deputies and the court in this had two raises since the war. Have

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— TE ALVIS,

"| do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.

Hoosier Forum

"Who Are Public Officials Who Were, Delinquent in Pollard Case 7"

I don't get it. They say the OPA By H. B. Stevens, 3201 Graceland ave. controls rents. Then why haven't I am a Times booster, have taken your paper for several years. To!

me your editorial April 13, 1945, is a masterpiece—" How to Grow Your |they put a control over garages?

Own Criminals.” You haven't completed the job. With the election |The landlords can raise the rent

“WHY NO OPA CONTROL OVER GARAGE RENTALS?” By A Housewife, indianapolis

rotten Howard Pollard case, and eliminate from our courts people like they done anything in the way of these. |repairs. Oh po, not oré. The I have always admired The Times because you were fearless in driveway is littered with all kinds printing the news and calling a spade a spade. Now let us know who|of trash and glass. Also the doors these guilty culprits in this Pollard’ are about off. They are supposed case are, and let us defeat them in|lions of us citizens might do well{to have a man to look after the this coming election. {to be getting out of lodges. Cer-|driveway and such, but I haven't I'm going to watch The Times tainly—D. C. Stephenson did not|seen him. I guess I am just a dumb for the names of these mgn, who murder Miss Madge Oberholtzer housewife and not supposed to know share Pollard’s guilt. Please print and I believe that this case, as|these things. If everyone in these these names this week. | viewed and expressed by the aver-| garagés would give them up, there > TY {age American, is considered a dis-| would be other suckers. Wé have Boi 0s Note ye Boi publish { grace to the justice of this zentral|old cars, but nevertheless don’t want Ear amd the abl hases of S1At€ Of the nation. them sitting out in all kinds of the Polar case in. our Li ool] We all know that many criminals| weather. I ask you why can't there UmDS. , s who have committed murder out- | be rent control over garages. ’ ua a {right have been paroled or pardoned a. 8 a |in far less time than that which|“WHY USE TAX MONEY FOR “AMERICA DOESN'T THINK |p. (C. Stephenson has already ORGANIZATION BUILDINGS?” .. OF FUTURE OR ARMY NEED” |gerved, and yet this man is heid in|By R. E. H., Indianapolis By oy Isa, Sntiamtelis |prison. For what? I believe mil-| If the Indiana legislature apler”: W Yyou|lions of good citizens in the state : are a mother who loves her son|of i and out would like te proved aad spetoptizied 32.500 000 very dearly. You lost one son as| know “for what is D. C. Stephenson T° tWo new buildings for the Inmany did, so let's have it so your being held after 25 years ‘nuprison- [diana World War Memorial plaza grandchildren won't be lost in the) ment” for the sole; purpose of our great next war, and that will surely hap-| To my knowledge I have never| american Legion headquarters here pen if you and I, and the rest of|seen D. C. Stephenson or any of his|in Indianapolis, and if the highly the true Americans, don't do some- family, but I have followed the esteemed Legion headquarters have thing about it. Iwas inthe wari press accounts-of-this-case fromthe und gre being so-kind to withhold and I certainly hope no son of mine| beginning and I believe the Steph-|the erection of these buildings unwill have to go through with what enson case . ng

: is both outstanding and tj] after the easing of the veterans’ | {loud in a cry to the entire nation | housing shortage, then please let

5

T'S: OUR BUSINESS i By Donald D. Hoover . Pp nny ‘ ho ¥ ‘Son of Heaven’ Still Molds Mi

IT'S OUR PUSINESS to realize that the apparent gains in so-called liberal strength in the Japanese elections last week do not herald a major change in the thought processes of the Japanese. : In the first place, even the most educated of Japanese . . . men and women who have been in the United States a number of times . . . still do not have a genuine concept of what democracy really means. They know the phrases and the trappings of democratic government . . . but they still cling to the worship of their emperor and their ancestors. I have seen this demonstrated too often . . . by real leaders who braved being branded as quislings to co-operate with Gen. MacArthur . . . to have any optimistic hope of any immediate change.

Believe in Son of Heaven IN HOMES PALATIAL by present-day standards of the war countries of the Orient, I have listened to men who will play a part in reshaping Japanese destiny tell of the divinity of the emperor. And they believe it. If that is true, what of the ordinary Jap of the street and village? For their entire lives, every Jap born since the middle eighties has been instructed that at the heart of the people of Nippon (which is what they call their homeland) and at the head of the state is the emperor, known to the people as Tenshi, the son of heaven, or Tenno, the heavenly king. They believe that it is the destiny of their emperor, now Hirohito and 124th of his line, to bring peace to the earth by eventually bringing all under the domination of his dynasty. That is a belief that only

WASHINGTON, April 16.—Merger of the armed services i a department of common defense, as recommendéd by the senate military affairs committee, makes common sense. It isn’t just to eliminate duplication of effort in planning, procurement, supply, and service functions that unification is necessary. It is simply that no military power which sticks to traditional ways of thinking can last long in the world of tomorrow. The old rule books and manuals need to be thrown away and replaced by new ones. Nor is it the navy alone that needs to be absorbed into a new department of common defense. The army and the air forces also need a thorough overhauling to bring them up to date.

| New Weapons Mean New Problems

IF THE WAR had lasted another year or two, necessity would have dictated this complete reorganization, There is no valid reason why reorganization should not be effected in time of peace. Traditions of the services, their proud records, have to be put in the museums and history books, along with bows and arrows and knights carrying spears, to make way for new technological warfare. Every bit of information released on new weapons under development when the war ended indicates how radically different are the problems of national defense. Air transport is just beginning. The possibility that all ground forces will in time have to become airborne is very real. The use of guided missiles—drone planes and bombs operated by remote control through radio and television—is also just beginning. The use of rockets is just beginning. The U, 8. army will fire its first V-2 type German rockets at White Sands, New Mexico, May 8. These are mere experimental models, with ranges of only 200 miles, reaching altitudes up to 100 miles, attaining speeds up to a slow-poke 3500 miles per hour. The airplane itself may still be in the toy stage of development. B-29s flew 3000 miles round-trip to drop their first atomic bombs. The B-36 will have

WASHINGTON, April 16.—Because of the worry sometimes—over-the functioning of our democratic

| processes in these confused times, it is encouraging

to report on a fine example of how public opinion can be rallied to bring its influence to bear on con-

That was the trouble in the last|for justice. | ; ; : war, They never trained any men | J 2 8 je American Legion headijtaviers, | for coming emergencies. Do you “CITIZENS ARE ANXIOUS TO |jegisiators explain in an open letter | think Japan or Germany would END JUVENILE DELINQUENCY” to th blic, i tate have jumped on us if they knew|p. cu. ; 10 118 pute, in our Sale mows | By Citizen and Voter, Indianapolis {papers, how and since when has it | we were prepared. Yes, if they had| I wish to congratulate The Indi- been a policy to use the taxpayers’| sald after the last war that a boy anapolis Times on the editorial, and veterans’ money to house any | would get a xear or two in the army, “How to Grow Your Own Crimi-|certain organization or clique | everyone would have been up in thei nas» on page one of Saturday's] Just why isn’t that money being | alr. But if they had done that, mimes 1t eloquently expresses the used to provide medical care and | maybe you wouldn't have lost your|ijeas of so many persons on our hospitals for sick and disabled vet- | son. That is the trouble with most| question of juvenile delinquency inlerans? Or is it that since the war | Americans. They never think of the| te city, There is certainly too much [is over these such cliques and future. As much as I dislike the|pyckpagsing on whom to lay the| handsakers, as this seems to be army life and its same old routine, piame for lack of correction and|want to forget that the veterans I can't say that it hurt me in the| punishment of our juvenile wrong-|fought for our country to save it least. Furthermore, peacetime army goers, and our people. And now they still i » pushover, Think about it, MIS.| They start young, evade every want to shove us around and cram Times Reader, it means a lot. I'm| sentence and end up murderers another mass of rock down our sorry if T hurt your feelings, but it| Noy the citizens are anxious to put|necks, like such cliques did the vet was just the point I wanted So much gn end to this. We like and believe|erans of the first world war to get over He waz. pe I? in The Times. We liked your edi-| 100k at the cost of the World . torial. Now please write another ya, Memorial building and the anEL CASE OR one and tell us how and who to Vote |; a) expense of Upeis % up. Aen for to change this state of affairs,|it true it could have been a-hospital By William Rogers, Indianapolis and we will do it. Enough is enough. | jnctead of a massive pile of rock

shrewdly—and cheaply—it is agreeing to “sell out” to those who would forfeit the right of a man freely to choose a! military career, with the proviso congress will get a five- | months “calm” in which to lull the public into false se-|

curity.

This nation will not tolerate permanent old-world con- | taken in by a cheap draft holiday.

gain it will find the voters not as dumb as it seems to think.

~ SAVE SOME FOOD HERE are some famine facts— A spot check of the northwest indicates grain supplies there are 50 to 90 per cent below what they were this time last year. : : President Truman expects the next harvests abroad to + defeat major phasés of starvation. But he says the crisis “of hunger will continue another three months. : Secretary of agriculture finds that if each American had saved a slice of bread a meal the last few weeks we ,could have conserved 20,000,000 bushels of grain, and that could have meant 20,000,000 lives. : Put it all together and your job is clear: Eat a little

him, ; 5 om marPY DAY

J UNDREDS of radio fan letters ask the federal commu"nications commission to eliminate soap operas and murmysteries. One father writes that killer programs “corchildren. A woman laments that too many wiredramas spring from a false notion that all housewives

seription alongside its bill of rights. The public will not be | 9° much by the press), then mil-|dates for public office.

Carnival —By Dick Turner

And if congress goes through with this fraudulent bar- |

I fully endorse the recent letter of J. Roy Jolson 11 Tend io thet" Vat 8 change. just to look at? Which would have D. €. Stephenson case, and will add| Editor's Note: The Times will done the most good? my further personal opinion, - make its non-partisan recommenda-| Sr: If 25 years imprisonment can tions to the voters just before the! 3 UDOES SHOULD WEIGH happen to a man mainly because| primary election, after it has made ™ ™ IN DIVORCES he belonged to a secret order|a careful study of the records and By Onlooker, Indianapolis (which order has been mentioned the campaigns of the various candi- Why do not our judges who preside in the divorce courts give due!

consideration to the ex G. Is be-| ing unfairly cast off by their wives?! Why are only the woman's socalled feélings considered? | “We know of a case where the 1 |woman's character is questionable, and it is known, too, that the G. I. provided the wife with money be-

complete furnishing their home, etc. The husband of good character with sevéral vears overseas duty was told immediately upon returnfg he was not wanted in the home he had provided. At one divorce proceeding the ex-G. I. was ordered to get out of his home (by the judge) that same day, giving all to the undeserving wife. Where is justice expected of our courts? Must the G. Is give up their homes besides the time given uncomplainingly te our country?

ful, selfish, greedy and cruel wives give up the homes so cherished by the G. I. “1 thought only such unfair justice was found in Japan and Ger-many-where the G. I. fought so gallantly. :

DAILY THOUGHT

His lord said unto him, Well : Sone, thou good and faithful servant; thou hast been faithful over

sex-starved or being betrayed by their husbands. commission ruefilly responds that’it lacks jurispatter. Too much like censorship. Seems : will continue until sets allow listenick to the studios: “Shut up!” Speed that

.

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a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things; enter * thou into the joy of thy lord.— Matthew 25:21,

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gress. This was in connection with the overshadowing issue of our times—specifically over the bill for control of atomic energy sponsored by Senator McMahon (D. Conn.). The alert and tireless senator finally won approval by the special senate committee on atomic energy, of which he is chairman, of a measure which, though not perfect, seems now to be generally satisfactory to the military, the scientists and the public. It is scheduled to go before the senate this week.

McMahon Carried Ball Alone

HF SHARES CREDIT with the scientists who worked relentlessly against too much military control, which finally became the vital issue; with instruments of public opinion they eventually aroused and, ultimately, with American public opinion which somehow instinctively senses the import of such a critical issue and makes itself felt. Senator McMahon, a freshman and a youngster— he is 42 and came to the senate in 1945—started way back of taw, as they say, with this issue. He was handicapped in more ways than one at the beginning. Though the author of a resolution for a special senate committee to study this subject and of a bill for control, he ran up against the usual objection among senate leaders to making a newcomer chairman of such a special committee. There was the customary compromise. He was made chairman, but the committee was packed with old-timers, some of them most conservative. : The military, led by Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves, who supervised the atomic bomb project, got the jump by pushing through the house military affairs committee the so-called May-Johnson bill which secientists felt would severely hamstring scientific re-

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time can change .:'. . and Hirohito's denial of his divinity will be regarded by many as a denial forced by the foreign conquerors, :

Don't forget that the Japs have been taught ... ‘and sincerely believe . . . that their history goes back

to 600 years before Christ, when the first émperor,

Jimmu Tenno, ascended the throne. Jimmu-Tennosal,

the anniversary of founding the empire, was.celebrated this month, as* will be the 45th birthday of Hirohito . . . and the emperor still is regarded as the head of the state, renunciation of divine claims or no.

Ancestral Spirits Hover RESERVED FOR ancestral spirits and for possible use in the remote contingency that the emperor hime self might visit the home, every Japanese residence has a recessed alcove in which the past is worshiped. Since the China incident of 1937, religion has been used as a focal point, under domination of the ministry of. education, for development of Shinfoism, a religion revived to further nationalism. Dating from pre-historic times, Shintoism today is the national religion. It is based on worship of the imperial ancestral gods and ancestral spirits. There is no other doctrine, no idols or images in the shrines. Promotion of patriotism and nationalism is its purpose. And despite the fact Gen: MacArthur is try ing to wipe it out, this-deeply rooted belief will persist until new generationi“are born and a new edu. cational system has been’ constructed . . . because it lies deep in heart and mind of the Japanese of whate

ever station .in life, whatever he may profess,

It will be at least a generation before Japanese thought processes are changed.

REFLECTIONS . . . By Peter Edson Common Sense and National Defense

a range of more than double that. And the 10,000. mile flying wing is said to be ready for unwrapping.’ What the atomic bomb will do to naval vessels may be demonstrated in tests at Bikini atoll this year, That warships, as presently conceived, may have to be scrapped is no remote pipe-dream. Rear Adm. Harold G. Bowen, director of naval research, admits that in saying that atomic-powered submarines may be the war vessels of the future. The. problems involved in giving them practically unlimited range, letting them remain submerged for unlimited periods, and equipping them to launch rockets or guided missiles against targets they cannot see, are not considered insurmountable. In view of such prospects as these, it is impossible to see how anyone can resist the logic of a complete

reorgaiiization of national defense. If needs reorgan-

ization from the highest to the lowest echelons.

Modernize Service Education GRIPES AGAINST army and navy caste systems and courts-martial and uniform regulations are fun. damental. : The service educational system needs modernizing. West Point and Annapolis and the air university at Maxwell _fleld may be all right asugraduate schools for the training of specialists. But courses at these three academies might be preceded by a joint-service preparatory school. In such a unified service school, men later electing one of the three branches of serve ice could be given their indoctrination into what uni. filed common defense really means, before going on to their “trade” schools. More of this same unification needs to be carried over into general staff schools and the war colleges for the higher brass. But perhaps the most important recommendation of all those made by Senator Elbert D. Thomas’ military affairs subcommittee is the proposal of increased and co-ordinated research under a new assistant sec retary of defense. Some of the fanciest braid to be worn in any future military organization should be hung on the scientists and inventors who perfect the new weapons of common defense. :

IN WASHINGTON . . . By Thomas L. Stokes Public Helped Shape Atom Control

search for military as well as civilian purposes. This measure. was held back by the house rules committee, before which it is pending, because of the protest of the scientists. - The May-Johnson bill also was before the senate committee. Its co-sponsor, Senator Johnson (D. Col), chairman of the senate military committee, also is & member of the atomic energy committee. Scientists who had worked on the bomb project became alarmed. They found they were working against heavy odds, so skillfully had the military moved in to seize advantage before congress or the public. knew enough about the subject to realize the significance of the trend of events. The fight broke into the oper on the amendment sponsored by Senator Vandenberg (R. Mich), which Senator McMahon and the scientists believed would give the military such control that scientific re= search would be shackled so that in the end “the United States, now far out in’ front, quickly would fall behind. But ‘Senator McMahon found himself alone against this amendment when the showndown came in the committee.

International Control Next THE SCIENTISTS BECAME desperately and feverishly active. They took pains to explain the issue to committee members and others in congress. They made speeches and issued statements. They interested the newspapers. Finally public opinion was stirred. Within three or four days, a total of 20,000 letters poured in upon the senate committee. Only five were for military control. This barrage had its effet, along with that from other avenues of public opinion. The Vandenberg amendment. was revised. Other changes were, made. The expression of public opinion seems, too, to have had a chastening effect on the military. Within two weeks, the senate committee will take up the bill for international control. The public means while should inform itself on the still’ bigger issues involved there.

WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William Philip Simms

WASHINGTON, April 16.—The next 30 days may make exciting history. The security council sessions | Which began yesterday in New York, and the Big | Four meeting in Paris April 25, are likely to be revealing.© They should tell which nations want early peace and which want the muddied waters of the | world to remain clouded for the purpose of better fishing. ve Uneasiness over Russia is increasing among the United Nations. More and more they are asking what | she wants. Since 1939, she has annexed Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, half of Poland, Bessarabia, the Bukovina, Moldavia, eastern Czechoslovakia, east Prussia, | Finland's Karelia and Petsamo, Tanna Tuva, southern Saghalien, and the Kuriles. She has made satrapies of Outer Mongolia, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Poland. The indications are that she has her eye on Chinese Sinkiang and perhaps Korea and Manchuria, and there is still considerable anxiety over | Iran and Turkey. i

U.S. Might Make Separate Peace IN THE AGGREGATE, here is an area nearly two-thirds the size of the United States, And Russia held one-sixth of the habitable globe before she began this fresh expansion. Still; apparently, her appetite has not been fully satisfied. Her insistence on a trusteeship over Italy's Tripolitania, in North Africa, and other items like Trieste which she wants for Yugo-

slavia, has held up the peace settlements for six.

months. It was to get negotiations going again that Secretary Byrnes requested the Big Four meeting at Paris. . .. 2g ; . | Unless Russia shews a more’ reasonable attitude at Paris, the United States may a Slam : il ;

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Reds Beat Tom-Toms of Confusion

peace with Italy and perhaps some of the other na= tions involved. Mr. Byrnes is known to feel rather

keenly that world reconstruction can't get started

unless just peace settlements can be concluded. But the United Nations has other worries besides these. Not only does Russia seem inclined to hold -up the peace until she gets what she wants, but she appears disposed to go along with the collective security organization only if allowed to have her own way. This week's security council debates, therefore, probably will be troubled if not stormy. Through her Polish satellite, Russia has raised the Spanish issue while she, herself, has asked that the case of Iran be stricken from the docket. She charges that the council acted “illegally,” hence she doubtless will put up a battle to have the whole thing purged from the records. » :

Russia Wishes to Dodge Explanation " RUSSIA, HOWEVER, is believed to have still another motive. The council has asked both her and Iran to report to it on May 6—the final date fixed for the Red army's evacuation of Iran—and she does not want to make any such report. She wants the council to take her word for it now and drop the matter at once. Then, if, perchance, Soviet troops remained behind, say in Azerbaijan—which province she might choose to regard as “autonomous” and not exactly part of Iran—difficult, if not embarrassing explanations would not be necessary. : Russia is bound to encounter® strong opposition— among others from the United States. and Britain, Whatever happens, however,

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