Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1946 — Page 8
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Remarkable, Saturday, Oct. 12, 1946 Som a WARD LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ be ARB yau : Business Manager a SCRIPPS -HOWARD NEWSPAPER
and published daily (except Sunday) by Swed p Publishing Co, 214 W. Maryland st. Postal Zone 9.
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Give Lioht and the People Will Pind Their Own Way
ILE PROBATION - THE TIMES has received several complaints from persons interested in the probation system and from distraught nts of children on probation, based on the current series of articles entitled “How to Grow Your Own Criminals.” . This series reveals the breakdown of the probation system in juvenile court and is aimed at improving operation of that court, where the community’s most precious asset—its children—is handled when a brush with the law
is involved. ; Us “You are using unfortunate children for political pur-
poses,” said one complainant. : . “You are only trying to defeat Judge Mark Rhoads,” |" | said another. Aas * «you are distorting the truth,” said still another. “Do you believe in the probation system?” asked a
church leader.
» » » WE do believe In a probation system that rehabilitates, that follows through and helps youngsters reconstruct their lives, that is free of political implications, that is carried out by trained and understanding workers. It is because of this belief that we are opposed to reelection of Judge Rhoads. If that is politics, then we are guilty of politics. We realize that there would be suffering
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Weight These Things Can Carry
al
‘SENATOR ROBERT A. TAFT'S APOLOGY for the Nuernberg trials must certainly have been a comfort for the condemned in the cell blocks behind the palace of Justice. 1 think that a great many Germans, particularly those awaiting trial before 1ésser tribunals, are in full agreement with him.
New Laws Not Needed WHEN I LEFT GERMANY just a year ago, it appeared to be the concensus of German barristers that the acts with, which the 22 defendants were charged were not covered by international law; hence, were not crimes. BL Senator Taft condemns the: trials on the ground that they violate the fundamental principle of American jurisprudence: A man cannot be tried under ex post facto statute. The criticism has an isolationist ring. ’ In the ‘first place, the Nazi war criminals were not tried under the American systems of jurisprudence. They were tried in an international tribunal, under
Editor's Note: Donald D. Hoover has turned his column over today to Richard Lewis, Times staffer who was with the Paris edition of the Stars and Stripes, to present the other side of Mr. Hoover's criticism of the Nuernberg trial methods and of the Democratic attacks on Senator Taft on his comments. The question of guilt of the Nazi war criminals is riot involved.
the American, British, French
procedures combining These are not
and Soviet systems of jurisprudence, similar, particularly in procedures. Both the French and Soviet systems permit hearsay evidence, even the elaborate airing of opinions before the court, while the Anglo-Saxon procedures do not. In the second place, the war criminals were not tried. under any ex post facto statute. None was needed. They were tried under laws and statutes which have been Written in international treaties for more
in some families if the identity of the juveniles cited in “How to Grow Your Own Criminals” becomes known— which is why we have in no case identified the youths whose
records are published. ‘ dee Bhai na We know that some who honestly believe Judge Rhoads : is a good judge interested only in the welfare of the chil- "Judge Rhoads Has Able Staff
dren will spring to his defense with the accusation that the “yt . i factual records we are printing are distorted. To those Of Non-Pol ical Social Workers
: i . And facts speak | By Wesley A. § ger, 5023 N. Capitol ave., former school principal peop e er Yiat sien feiuet thy Safe : Pp Strange how truth can be distorted! Mr. Hoffmann and his subtle oude .
promoters behind the screen, in their design to control the juvenile court, are perverting the facts pertaining to the administration of Judge Rhoads. The writer attended the Church Forum last April to hear the five candidates in the primary. Mr. Hoffmann, in his turn, stated with much emphasis that he would be the Democratic candidate. He made it clear that he is a Democrat, which in itself is no discredit to the man. His statements, however, were evasive and not imbued with vision, mission and program. He was candid in admission that he is not versed in problems of juvenile conduct. situation: is cancellation of buying Men cannot be built up in a few| power, then slowing down of proweeks by some sophisticated and | duction followed by lay-offs, unsurreptitious group to be a con-|employments, then the beginning structive leader in situations of | of new bread lipes. n
youth adjustment and social guid- ® = ance. “READERS DO NOT LIKE
The court staff as selected by| UNSIGNED FORUM LETTERS”
Judge Rhoads consists of people|By S. Eflis, 914 N. Riley st. trained and experienced in the broad field of social welfare. Both major parties are represented withs out discrimination, and some of the pest colored skill is doing a'splendid work among their people. The background of the entire staff is complimentary to Judge. Rhoads. The writer challenges Mr. Hoflmann, by virtue of his candidacy, on every phase of his recent approach to the many problems in juvenile behavior. Furthermore, the writer, although on the eligibility list of state social welfare workers since 1935, is not now available to service unless needed. Nevertheless, the accomplishments of Judge Rhoads are not to be maliciously scrapped.
s " » “«G. 0. P. FOLLOWING SAME OLD PATH TO BREAD LINES” By W. C. Frye, 811 N. Grant ave. Replying to H. L. Schuck in his article, “New Dealers Best at Forgetting the Past,” published in the Forum Oct. 5. 1 wish to take issue with you, Mr. Schuck, on your statement quoted) above. The New Dealers do re-| member, quite -vividly, clear back|
Hoosier Forum
- td " . » » THE community needs a strong juvenile court. It does not have one now. We support Judge Rhoads’ opponent because he is pledged to create such a court and his party leaders have promised a “hands off” policy insofar as his staff and operations are concerned, should he be elected. ‘The series “How to Grow Your Own Criminals” will be continued in the interest of cleaning up a bad situation. It may offend a few. And it may help benefit many.
WHERE PEOPLE DON'T COUNT JOHN STROHM, author of the vivid word-and-picture story of the Russian people currently appearing in The Times, enjoyed ‘a freedom of movement seldom permitted to foreigners during his tour of the Soviet Union. He found a primitive land, sadly devastated by war, where a simple, friendly and peace-loving people are eking out a bare existence by the most arduous toil. Sawmills had been destroyed, and logs for new homes were being hewn by hand. Where plows had been carried away by the enémy, fields were worked by spades, most of them in the hands of women. But not all of the misery in Russia today can be charged against the Germans. The political bosses in the Kremlin must accept responsibility for some of it. Mr. Strohm visited one collective farm which had sent all of its men—146 of them—into the Red army. Of that number 40 are dead, only 15 were back on the farm. And where are the rest? Most of them are in the Red army, living off the toil of other peasants, in Poland, Hungary, Austria, Gerntany, Bulgaria and Romania. These farmergoldiers, whose wives must work the fields in their absence, have become pawns in the game of power politics being played by their Soviet masters at Paris. od » » » » USSIA has more men under arms today other nations of Europe combined. Wherever he went, Mr. Strohm was told by the people they did not want another war, particularly not a war with the United States. Unfortunately, the people are not consulted about such matters in the Soviet Union. When they are allowed to vote, it is only for candidates selected by their Communist overlords. They are given no opportunity to express their views. Even private conversations must be guarded in Russia. gE In the Ukraine, people told Mr. Strohm that American . food, brought to the country by UNRRA, has averted starvation. They were deeply grateful for our assistance. Yet one of the bitterest critics of thie United States at the Paris peace conference has been Dr. Dmitro Manuilsky, the Ukranian foreign minister. He can ignore public opinion, * because he lives in a totalitarian state, “Teg It was in fhe Ukraine that a woman, working in the field with sickle, hoe and flail, asked Mr. Strohm to tell the American people to send more bread, because “we don’t have enough to eat.” Surprised, the reporter pointed to the field of ripe grain.
ob NAN
from readers urging that the press print the names, if not the addresses, of its contributors to the Hoosier Forum. A case in point, X refer to the letter in last Friday's issue from a “Gallery Listener” wherein he is obviously undesiring to have his name printed. It appears that he is writing as an individual but evidently represents a group. “We don’t think that this was the object”—and again, “But we think in fairness to the general public” and still again, “We think that the public should know that,” ete. I am not a member of the C. I. O. “Nor am I taking sides in the dispute between the Rex company and its employees. What I am writing about is the spineless policy of the press who permit their readers to criticize the other fellow politically or non-politically while hiding behind a pen name. If a person desires the
” » ‘than all of the
party put over the
voted out of control.
The New Dealers or any thoughi-| Editor's Note: We agree that
direction today.
unlimited amount of which has brought inflation which |
next step naturally following this | spected.
Carnival —By Dick Turner gem”
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That is the reward of labor under a dictatorship— where people don't count.
- | CHALLENGE TO INDUSTRY | : SPEAKERS from industry and labor, brought together in : Boston this week by the American Management, agsociation, discussed the problems of “Tomorrow's Collective Bargaining.” .. Heading the list of future problems was the guaranteed ) , annual wage. Labor spokesmen said unions would make this a major demand in the next few years. Industrialists dwelt on the difficulties of granting such demands. Of course there are tremendous difficulties. But “difficult” or “impossible” is no answer for industry | to give when unions ask for an annual wage. ~~ Wedont dict that the guaranteed annual wage will “become al in American industry at an early date. ‘believe, though, that labor will—and should—continue Wise managements will seek the co-operation and their unions in overcoming the difficulties, working toward the goal by steps ps, but striving sincerely to rdach it. enge to industry's famed ingenuity and |’ y does not even try to meet that
§
wilh “You might at least have ACTED tight! "Haven't you any social
*
; peace 1 have read ‘a number of letters|on)y
crats.
tassels grow where one grew before by improving the corn crop of the
at a se : ; ns
"I do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.
“STASSEN, BALL, VANDENBURG PREACH A FALSE DOCTRINE” By W. C. Reese, Shelbyville Stassen says the Democrats fail.
Well if I were to try to solve the cause of the failure of the Democrats I would say that Stassen con-
tributed to the demoralization of the Democrats. Stassen, Ball and Vandenburg, all Republicans, engineered the plot to break up the Democratic and Republican party by their international program. The American people were told by George Washington that we should not make any alliances with Europe. As result of the false doctrine that by alliances with Europe and the organization of the United Nations, as preached by Stassen, Ball and Vandenburg, we would have world peace the people were led to believe in the international alliances as a road to , when such organizations lead to war. Teday as result of the teaching of this group the Democratic administration has entered country in the world with some organization. we must talk in world terms. What we need is a party pledged to take America out of Europe and to confine ourselves to domestic questions. That was what Mr. Wallace was trying to tell the DemoThe American people need more sugar, more meat, more fats, more toilet paper and less of talk of war with Russia. Byrnes assumes that the people back him up on the policy of intervention in the affairs of Europe. Wallace knows that the best way to keep the peace of the world is to keep out of your neighbor's business and that applies to government as well as to people. 1 don’t know just how Russia runs her government. them democracy, then we just as Li 0 vole an § pesdom well gxpect they Ju pe oy here born at the little town of Thurso, Caithness county, criticize group or a political party, fasting Sp ih, oe aT Scotland. The town is at the northwestern tip of this he should have the courage andthe constitution and our form of backbone to have his name printed. | government and let the rest of the to world war-I when your favored|And I believe others think the same | world run fts own business. It is not famous Teapot way. I think the newspaper read-ig crime to be an isolationist. StasDome deal, killed the League ofling public does not place any faith gen. Ball and Vandenburg sold the Nations, and turned out the long-|in letters signed “Gallery Listener,” | seople on this new brand of interest bread lines over the country| “Taxpayer,” “Citizen,” and a dozeti | nationalism, but we are getting over ever known and allowed’ them t0|othiers who may frequently write tne fever and just watch our people continuously increase until you were more than one newspaper regularly. |yvote for American principles when they get a chance. ful unbiased person can see that|letters with signatures attached for Sh Wel OLR Joos Ye you are again headed in the same! publication are better reading than the suffering, but when it comes to You have with|initials or such names as “Taxpay-| fying the boundary lines of any the aid of the Southern so-called |er,” etc. However, for personal or| ... that is not our business.} Democrats killed the OPA and an business reasons, some writers re-| ,. it {s less our business if we heritance from the Bowdoin estate, legislation | quest that we not use their names |, co to go into partnership with of about 4000 acres in the Ligonier valley of Pennalthough they are attached to the England to see that oll concessions is synonimous with low wages. The letters. These requests are re- | .. tapen care of in the deal We have a military budget of thirteen billion dollars and 25 per cent of the meat of the United States is alloted to thé army, That | means the larger the army, the | more meat it takes, and we take 25 peri cent of what will feed 140 million people to feed one million peopie cost. This is what happened when we | go international in our policies, and |the best way to insure peace is to ‘get out of Europe and quit following | Stassen, Ball and Vandenburg. Wallace is from the corn country | ot Towa and thinks in American | terms. © He has contributed more than all the rich like Harriman, whose wealth was left to him by his father, and in that appointment Mr, Truman failed the people of this
So
nation.
a 4.0 ® «USE SCAFFOLDING FOR | BUILDING NEW HOUSES”
By ‘Die
There is enough wood in the scaffolding ‘of unnecessary downtown improvements to build dozens of veteran's houses. What goes?
—————— DAILY THOUGHT But it shall not be well with the" wicked, neither shall he prolong | his days, which are as a shadow; pecause he feared not before God. —Ecclesiastes 8:13. wie SL
An atheist's jaugh's‘a poor exchange: For Delty offended! —Robert Burns.
.
Halleck Heading
DEAR BOSS: OUR CONGRESSMAN Charley Halleck, dean of the Hoosier Republicans in the house and chairman of the national congressional campaign committee, got plenty of headlines and some editorials this week when he figuratively threw the empty butcher blocks at his Democratic opponents. Cracking back at a Democratic national committee charge that the G. O. P. members of congress largely are to blame for the meat famine, Mr. Halleck reminded everyone that the Democrats had a majority in both the house and senate throughout the 79th congress. >
Might Become Speaker
HE SUGGESTED they shoulder the blame and use the campaign slogan: “Let them eat horse meat.” Technically, of course, it is true that the Democrats outnumbered Republicans in both houses of congress. But actually the working majority in the house ‘was composed of a coalition of so-called “oldline” southern Democrats and the conservative northern Republicans. And nobody knows that better than our Charley Halleck, unless it is Rep. Charley La“ Follette, the self-styled “radical” Republican from Evansville, who wanted no part of it. But Halleck ‘was up to his hips in the intrigue involved in bringing the two groups together in their highly successful effort to checkmate almost all the New Deal legislative program suggested by President Truman in message after message. Mr. Halleck is a member of the house rules committee. This committee says what general legislation shall be taken up on the house floor and how much time will be allowed to debate it. The only way a bill can reach the floor otherwise i$ to obtain 218 signatures to a discharge petition. That means getting a majority of the entire house membership to sign and that isn’t easy. Halleck, for instance, never signs one, says such things are out of
every
We assume now that
Indians Whip
IT'S OUR BUSINESS . . . By Richard Lewi
a war, covenants. They were charged with having murdered millions of noncombattants. This is a crime by international treaty as well as by the laws of the second and third reichs,
World Order Must Start
does an international criminal court. admits the guilty of the defendants, but objects to the manner in which they were tried.
we
Taft Wrong in: Nuernberg Criticism
than 100 years and which were recognized as law by Germany.
Treaties written since the congress of Vienna to
the Paris Peace conference have produced a body of law outlawing war and, at the rules of war. fendants were charged not only were defined as criminal under these treaties and covenants, but are high crimes in the internal law of every nation involved in the war. 3
minimum, establishing The specific acts with which the de-
#
1t should be perfectly obvious that the acts of the
defendant are considered crimes not only in international usage, but by the basic Yaw .of the western world, the Ten Commandments. >
The argument that no law existed on an interna-
tional level under which the defendants could be tried is fundamentally an argument on what constitutes law. There was no doubt in the minds of Justice Jackson and his associates at Nuernberg that the impact of treaties and covenants made in the last century is living, international law. The fact that no one has been able to enforce it does not obviate its existence.
The league of nations covenant which Germahy
signed certainly was not. voided because the Nazi government repudiated it, nor were the Locarno and Briand-Kellogg pacts wiped away because the Nazis ignored them.
The defendants were charged with having started This is a crime under the League of Nations
SENATOR TAFT BEGS THE REAL QUESTION
of Nurenberg: The punishment of crime on an international scale by a community of nations. ‘Whether" the United Nations constitutes a world community for the enforcement of international law may be moot; Senator Taft apparently feels it does not.
But world order has to start somewhere. And so Senator Taft
What, then, was the alternative. Wait until next
time? We did that at Versailles,
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Daniel M. Kidney
for Top House Job
order and interfere with the regular system of passing laws in the house. The rules committee can and does interfere plenty. It is here that Mr. Halleck joins with Southerners to prevent action on legislation they don’t like. The rebellion, of course, is against the New Deal efforts of Truman. This combination is ideal for the Halleck-like Republicans. They can get-what they want, or scuttle what they don't want, and in no case do they have to take too much responsibility. All they have to say is what he has been saying here this week: “Don’t forget that it was the Democrats who had a majority in both houses of the last congress.” That advantage will disappear when and if the Republicans capture the house in the 80th congress, Because he is an outstanding party leader, Mr. Halleck may be charged with considerable responsibility for what goes on there and then there can be no blaming the Democrats. It is rumored there that Minority Leader Joe Martin might be defeated in his Massachusetts district. If that turned ‘but to be true, Halleck would be well in the forefront among those to be considered by his party for the speakership provided the present minority becomes a majority.
Leader If G.O.P. Gets House
» ¥ IN ANY CASE, if they win, Halleck may be majority leader. Should the Democrats still hold the senate he would be busy for the next two years checking and perhaps checkmating proposed administrative proposals for legislation. Outside of the new title, as a matter of fact, his role woildn’t be very much different from what he has been doing, however. Upshot of all this is that while the Democrats have held congress the Halleck-to-Cox-to-Smith com= bination has left President Truman holding the bag. And he sure has turned out good at that. DAN KIDNEY.
SAGA OF INDIANA . . . By Wiliam A. Marlow
Territorial Governor
exonerated, and blacked out of the Revoluntionary
©
ARTHUR ST. CLAIR is a distinguished example of a square peg in a round hole.*Fate, with strange caprice, eased him into this role by a decree that he be
If we are to teach
hard-grained land some ‘25 miles from the Orkney islands, and about 125 miles from the shaggy Shetlands. Even as to his birth March 23, into uncertainty
1736, fate dogged, it
Story of Failure
AFTER DABBLING AROUND the University. of Edinburgh, and as an apprentice to an anatomist, he drifted into the British army, served -with Amherst in Canada, and on May 15, 1760, was in Boston. On that day, he married Phoebe Bayard, a niece of Gov. James Bowdoin. They had seven children. In 1762, with about $80,000 from his wife's inhe bought a tract
sylvania about 45 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. As the Revolutionary war was brewing in 1774, St. Clair’s honeymoon in life was over. At this point; the peg began to square itself in the hole that was round. ‘ He first clashed with the state of Virginia over, the control of his section of Pennsylvania, and lost the fight. He backed the fur traders and the treach= erous Shawnee Indians in their clash with frontier Pennsylvania until william Penn called a halt. He was ordered by Washington, as a major-general in 1777, to defend Ft. Ticonderoga, considered impregnable. To the amazement of colonial America, he evacuated the fort. For this he was court-martialed,
TODAY IN, EUROPE . . . By U.S. Keeps Atom
NEW YORK, Oct. 12.—Bernard M. Baruch’s stil-
that is just .one item of
atomic energy will have a stabilizing
country. Henry Wallace created 4 | more wealth than Harriman's father | more reasonable attitude in the Kremlin. ; | ever made. He made two corn Henry A. Wallace's campaign for appeasing Russia
disposing of shook confidence abroad.
of defense might be removed. And, of course, it encouragd the Russians -to suppose that, with further pressure, they might, entrap the Americans into some such gratuitous and foolhardy gesture.
Britain Supports Plan THE FIRM stand taken by Mr. Baruch, coupled with the fact that President Truman has made it plain that he and his administration are solidly behind the Baruch proposals, should do much to rectify a situation which at one time looked most menacing
Hard” Veteran, Indianapolis
2
is giving as solid support to the Baruch proposals as is the U, 8, government. - ~The matters in dispute between Britain and “the United States concern exchange of information on
atomic research and also
.
rn vad
wart defense of the American plan for controlling influence
throughout the free world and may even produce a
py discontinuing production of the bomb and by the American stockpile undoubtedly It alarmed many of the peace-loving nations, lest their only effective form
war. He then switched from war to politics. He was a delegate to the Continental congress for two.years, ending Nov. 28, 1787. He was president of the congress in 1787. This led to his crowning disaster. The sequel unfolds so: In 1787, he was appointed governor of the Northwest Territory, and served five years, till 1792. As governor, his headache was the Indians, largely of Indiana, who were all-out for war over land cessions. He first made the treaty of Ft. Harmar with some tag ends of these Indians in 1789. This alarmed the Indians, and spurred the English to sick them on the Americans with increasing confidence and fury. For two years, ragged, ill advised campaig against the Indians followed, The whole matter came to a boil at breakfast time on the morning of Nov. 4, 1791, as the Indian warwhoop sounded the signal for attack on the American army. This was on a 60-foot ‘branch of the Wabash river just over the Indiana line in north~ ern Ohio. St. Clair’s army, though superior to the Indian army under Little Turtle, fled in utter route to Cincinnati.
End of Tragic Career THIS DEFEAT FLASHED the signal for St. Clair’s fadeout in American affairs. He resigned from the army, but as governor he clashed with Ohio leaders over admission of Ohio as a state. When President
Jefferson looked into the matter, he fired him. +. That 7
2 a
was the end of his career in America, He died Aug. 31, 1818, at 82—in poverty, political oblivion, and his: Pennsylvania log cabin. Thus as Arthur St. Clair had lived, so a square peg in a round role.
Randolph Churchill Secrets From Allies.
material. When, in 1041, the two countries decided to pool all their existing knowledge, but to entrust to the United States the responsibility for development | of the bomb, there was an informal agreement that they should continue to exchange all information on atomic energy. Later, Canada was included -in the scope of this agreement. And it was publicly reiterated in November, 1945. For the last six months, however, the United States has made no information available either to Canada
SETIFIS
3 he died— |
ER A
RSCG pal
a i i] ] i i i i
to the peace of the world, The British government ”
distribution of fissionable
al io
or Great Britain, At the time of the fall of France, the French scientists were ahead of all other countries in atomic research, ‘The leading French scientists escaped to England with much valuable equipment and placed all of it at the disposal of the British government, = The Americans now believe that there is an under standing between’ the English and the: French by standing between the English and the French.
Why U.S. {s Reluctant : THE U. S. state department takes the view that any information reaching the French government is automatically bound to be passed on to Moscow. i Sess round, it is’ very easy to under 8 e erican reluctance to impart any more
SATURT
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