Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1946 — Page 22
a
T lie : : «By GEORGE WELLER ‘two Japs, who were in command By | Correspond For the bloody seven-week cruise
: Times Foreign ont: - SHANGHAI, China, June 5. he original copy of the Indianapolis Times Foreign Service story of famous death cruise in which 1300 of the 1600 American prisoners . in Jap hands, has been { by request to Gen. Douglas ur's legal section in Tokyo. brief, aimed at securing the penalty, is being drawn by E. Sinn,
Subic Bay and Formosa, Sinn has in custody one of the captains of the three ships which took part in the voyage of death, where veterans who had survived the Bataan death march succumbed to wounds; pneumonia, dehydration, dysentery and hunger. Jap Gen. Kou, who had charge of the Philippine camps, but did not participate in the cruise, is due to be hanged.
Stor [8-291 DWARFED In Death Cruise Charges
from Manila to Moji, Japan, via
BY NEW BOMBER
XB-36 40 Pot, Larger Than Famed Superfortress.
By Science Service
WASHINGTON, June 25.—In size the new army giant land-based bomber, the XB-36, is roughly 40 per cent larger than the famous B-29 superfortress that did so much in bringing Japan to her knees. Its engines deliver more than twice as
i. ' THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -_ On
ACACHI RRY
to date the American ta
Japanese military police have unable to find either of the
Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times
much power, In performance, much and The Chicagd Daily News, Inc. p pe
is expected, but little is known because this Sujet Riper plane is still on the ground. Construction of the new giant is completed and the plane is row under ground and taxi tests. Its first flight is scheduled for later in the summer, It was built at the Fort Worth, Texas, plant of the Consolidated-Vultee Aircraft Corp. It was designed and constructed under army supervision, Planes in Comparison For comparison, the XB-36 has a wing span of 230 feet, and the B-29 a span of 141 feet. The fuselage of the new giant is 163 feet long; that of the superfortress, 98 feet. The new plane is powered with six Pratt-Whitney 3000 horsepower engines; the older plane, with four engines delivering together 8000 maximum horsepower thrust. The XB-36 is equipped with pusher-type propellers, set in the after part of the wings. It needs 15 men in its crew. In comparison with the mighty Navy Mars, for long the largest flying boat, the XB-36 has a wing span of 30 feet greater, and is 46 feet more in length, The Glenn L. Martin cargo boat, now retired, was powered by four Curtiss-Wright engines, It was launched Nov. 8, 1941, and after severe tests was on active
AO
& a
-Grief-Stricken Hunger
Strike
wee
Mitzi, seven-year-old terrier, turns away from food offered by her master, James E. Trigg, Culver City, Cal, police sergeant, as she goes inte the 29th day of fasting from grief over the disappearance of her six-year-old daughter. Mitzi has stayed on her bed, refusing all food since the younger dog strayed away May 22.
Job's Daughters Set Installation
Miss Patricia Sloo, 2837 Brookside, fifth messenger; Patty Cullings, ave., will be installed by Mrs. Lou Senior Sustoniany ary pleson, jun- : | ior custodian; arlotte Green, inazn Elliot as honored: gieen ot ner guard, and Roberta Wood, outJob's Daughters Bethel 1 at 7:30) or guard, are others to be installed. p. m. Saturday in Trainmen's hall, | treet BACTERIA IN SOIL
; | jz x Washing-| ow ASHINGTON. — Bacteria are i {found at greater depths in soil or
Other officers to : ; : in ocean muds than any other livbe installed in-|, : | ing animals.
i clude Gretchen Ff Ann Moffitt, sen-| ior princess; Joann Green, junior princess; Dorothy | Saulsberry, guide; Edith
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Patricia Sloo and Beverly May,
treasurer,
duty with the navy air transport service two years later, Its 15 months on the Pacific, crossing and recrossing from Cali-| fornia to Hawaii, was a notable war service. On a trip from Brazil to Trinidad it carried to total cargo of 35,000 pounds. It is predicted that the new army bomber will be considerably faster than the B-29, or the Mars, have a much greater range, and be able to carry heavier loads of men or bombs.
THERE'S A LIMIT
TO WHAT EVEN JEWS CAN ENDURE
E MAKE this statement because we are outraged by the continued insensitiveness
of that portion of the world we call civilized to the greatest human tragedy 6,000,000 Jews have met horrible death in Hitler's extermination camps and ghettos, of all time. 1,500,000 or less are left alive in Europe today—most of them homeless, unwanted and destitute; kept alive by one aim: to quit the scene of their degradation and emigrate to Palestine. 100,000—at least a fraction of those for whom continued existence in Europe has become impossible—COULD BE SAVED IMMEDIATELY. But at the very moment when action is mest sorely needed, there are new delays and further equivocation. We submit that there can be NO valid reason for failure to act now! The European war ended a year ago. Dean Earl Harrison of the University of Pennsylvania was sent by the President of the United States to investigate the condition of the Jewish survivors ‘in Europe. He submitted a report to the President which made it clear that any delay in the transfer of these unfortunate people to Palestine would result in misery and death. President Truman thereupon sent a letter to Prime Minister Attlee on August 31, 1945, requesting that 100,000 of these displaced European Jews be permitted to emigrate to Palestine at once. The request was rejected by the British Government. Instead, an investigation of the “situation—another investigation!—was proposed by Great Britain. The AngloAmerican Committee of Inquiry was set up. After four months of investigation this Committee unanimously recommended what President Truman proposed in the first place—the immediate admission of 100,000 Jews io Palestine. During all these months of investigation Jews who could be leading useful, happy lives in Palestine, suffered and died. : One would think that not a moment would now be lost in carrying out this act of elemental humanity. But no! “Conditions” which had been considered and rejected by the Committee are now being demanded by Prime Minister Attlee. And our own State Department continues in practice a procedure of “consultations” which may delay indefinitely the attainment of the noble objective to which our Government is fully committed. i _ Are we to condemn these pitiful Jewish survivors to an indefinite hopeless existence in the internment camps where they now languish? Are they to be left at the mercy of the hostile populations that surround them? Every observer who has recently returned from Europe has warned that there may be mass-suicide among these terribly harassed people who have for so long lived under tension and strain unless they are permitted to leave for Palestine without delay. America refuses to be an accomplice in such an outrageous act of inhumanity! These displaced Jews can be moved to Palestine in a matter of weeks. The Amer- . fcan people want them saved! We look to President Truman to stand firm on this matter and to direct the State Department to implement what is now the accepted policy of the United States. We look to the British: Government to carry out the unanimous recommendation of its own representatives on the Joint Committee, calling for the immediate transfer of these 100,000 Jews to Palestine, .
JWT BUCHANAN / Vez llitet iy CALLCREEK AY MERIDIAN ST.
We Demand Justice for a Tragic People NOW!
LOUIS ADAMIC ANDERSON DR. HENRY T. ATKINSON ROGER N. BALDWIN TALLULAH BAKHEAD MANCHESTER BODDY
JAMES W. GERARD FRANK GERVASI MORTON GOULD WILLIAM GREEN BISHOP FRANCIS J. HAAS REV. DR. JOHN HAYNES
PHILIP MURRAY PROF. REINHOLD NIEBUHR LOUIS NIZER DR. HARRY A. OVERSTREET DR. RAYMOND R. PATY
VAN WYCK BROOKS HOLMES REV. NORMAN VINCENT HENRY SEIDEL CANBY MOSS HART PEALE EDDIE CANTOR DR. B. J. HOVDE JUDGE FERDINAND JAMES B. CAREY QUINCY HOWE PECORA
MRS. CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT DR. EMANUEL CHAPMAN
FANNIE HURST DR. ALVIN S. JOHNSON DR. ROBERT L. JOHNSON ROCKWELL KENT SERGE KOUSSEVITSKY ALBERT LASKER HERBERT H. LEHMAN DR. EMIL LENGYEL DR. EDUARD C. LINDEMAN DR. WALTER C.
BROCK PEMBERTON DR. DANIEL A. POLING WALTER REUTHER QUENTIN REYNOLDS MRS. RUTH BRYAN OWEN ROHDE ARTHUR M. SCHLESINGER DR, HARLOW SHAPLEY DR. GUY EMERY SHIPLER SPYROS SKOURAS
WALTER DAMROSCH JONATHON DANIELS PROP, JOHN DEWEY GEN. WILLIAM DONOVAN
MELVYN DOUGLAS ; LOUDERMILK REV. RALPH W. SOCKMAN DR. STEPHEN DUGGAN © ISADOR LUBIN ESTELLE M. STERNBERGER BISHOP ANGUS DUN HENRY LUCE REX STOUT
PROF. ALBERT EINSTEIN
THOMAS A. MANN . DOROTHY CANFIELD FISHER
PROF. KIRTLEY F PROF. FRANCIS E McMAHON GEORGE MEANY JO MIELZINER EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER PAUL MUNI
NATHAN STRAUS HERBERT BAYARD SWOPE MARK VAN DOREN WALTER WANGER THORNTON WILDER IRA WOLFERT DR. MARY E. WOOLLEY DARRYL ZANUCK
MATHER MAJ, CO OROE FIELDING
ELI GENE FOWLER FRANK GANNETT LEWIS 8. GANNETT
INDIANAPOLIS CHAPTER OF THE AMERICAN
CHRISTIAN PALESTINE COMMITTEE
. C. B. ALDRICH DEAN F. D. KERSHNER ND ALLEN BISHOP R. A. . KIRCHHOFFER DR. SUMNER L. MARTIN DR. RUSSEL 8. MERKEL REV. A. GLEN O'DELL REV. KLASSLEO PETERS JUDGE HEZZIE B, PIKE JUDGE WALTER PRITCHARD DR. RICHARD RETTIG JOHN K. RUCKELSHAUS
HENRY F. SCHRICKER REV. VIRGIL A. SLY MRS. VIRGIL A. SLY MRS. J. H. SMILEY REV. K. E. THORNE REV. THOMAS THRASHER DR. L. C. TRENT DR. ROY E. VALE REV. R. C. FENGER LYNN A. WILLIAMS JR.
70 THE CONSCIENCE OF CIVILIZED MANKIND - Dopo s . a i»
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AUTHORS TO ASSIST |
IN I. U. CONFERENCE
Conducted by professional authors, Indiana university's 1946 writers’ conference ‘will be held on the campus July 7-20. In addition to night. lectures, daily workshops will be devoted to poetry, fiction, non-fiction and
The PEOPLE'S | DENTIST
Office Hours: 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. Every Day Except Sunday
owens 3612 W. Washington St.
LI-3995
DR. CHAS.
children’s literature. Henry Butler, Times book editor, will preside over a luncheon on ‘Indiatl, Authors | day,” July 14. \ Writers giving lectures and participating in workshops are Marie Sandoz, John R. Tunis, MacKinley Kantor, Robert Hillyer, Jeanette Covert Nolan, Mary Jane Ward,
Don Hérold, Marion Havighurst and Walter Havighurst.
YouMay Always Be Constipated If—
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