Ligonier Banner., Volume 78, Number 39, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 October 1944 — Page 7
- Hotel-Caters Exclusively to =~ - Servicemen and Their Families
Orne of the most unusual hotels in the nation is located in Washington, D. C., where, despite nightly sellouts, accommodations are provided far below OPA ceiling prices! - ‘ It is the United Nations Service Center, formerly. the Capitol Park hotel, now under the exclusive management of the Recreation Services of the War Hospitality committee. The only hotel in the United States taken over completely for this purpose, it is perhaps the largest Canteen in the world for servicemen of all the United Nations, and is operated as a voluntary community project along modern health and sanitation lines.
“'The United Nations Service center has everything—from its own newspaper, Flags Abreast, to a free nursery for children of traveling servicemen. Washington, D. C., is such a hub for the armed services that the Canteen, despite the hotel’s size, was forced to take over an adjoining school house, converting it into room for 345 more beds, a total of 570 available sleeping accommodations nightly.
The huge center was officially opened October 27, 1943, and there has been a virtual sell-out of accommodations since. It is the only Canteen that accepts the wives and families of servicemen, as well as those in uniform. No reservations are accepted—first come, first served. This is true of both officers and enlisted men.
Just recently, the 1,000,000 th visiting serviceman was honored. He was Petty Officer 3/c Stanley Wicklund, of Boston, Mass., stationed at tlslle naval air base, Patuxent River, d. : Has Own ‘Police Force.’ - Actually it looks like the headquarters of the general staff, except that 74 former employees of the Capitol Park hotel are still working there as members of the Canteen staff. Everything that occurs at the Canteen ‘'must be approved by. the military distriet of Washington and the Potomac River naval command. A 24-hour duty is maintained by the Shore Patrol—the Canteen’s own police force! :
Though much of the Canteén’s varied accommodations are free, some services are rendered on a cost basis, which astounds the average
Land-Lubbers Become Seamen In Six Months
“All right fellows. Line up on either side of the walk and oQ§n up your gear for inspection. No knives, guns, cameras or radios permitted aboard the base.” That’s the first order ‘‘boots’ entering the U. S. Maritime Service training station at Sheepshead Bay in Brooklyn, N. Y., hear when they ‘land” at the world’s largest merchant marine training station. Taken in tow by an MA (Master at arms), within 24 hours the new recruits are processed through the station and their equipment issued. From three to six months later these same ‘‘boots’’ emerge as thoroughly trained merchant seamen, ready to take their place as radio operators, deck or engine seamen, cooks, or assistant purser-hospital corpsmen aboard one of Uncle Sam’s modern merchant vessels. Recruits from Nebraska, Indiana, Alabama, Michigan—all across the country report in six days a qug‘:p at U. S. Maritimeé Service ' training stations to learn to sail aboard a wartime cargo vessel to “Deliver the Goods.”’ For his first few days at Sheepshead Bay, the new trainee is under the supervision of the indoctrination officer. His orientation includes reasons for and proper method of salut-
ing, proper stowing of gear and in-
structions in rules and regulations the station. A section instructor signed to each 50-man section then kes over and continues with :the newly- formed Section through ‘the first four weeks of preliminary or “boot” training.
In “boot"” training, the new trainee receives instructien in 20 subjects 'ranging from gunnery to mental hygiene. He attends classes eight hours a day, five days a week.. During bis ““boot” period, the new recruit uses a wide variety of training aids. He sees motion pictures, practical demonstrations of fire equipment, breathing devices, breeches buoys and -line-throwing. guns. Wall charts on a variety,of
7 B Leit, trainees practice fire-fighting 3n e s S B cmamigoilintheattholdotte . 8 ; & .S. 8. Sheepshead Bay. Three men ,}{M@??‘*”@Mg“%fi’, g% | : § | onthebridge play a stream of water && § & S s . on the sides of the hold to cool off i & Ae A : s the plates and confine the fire. The NS = = R T man in the foreground stands ready J§ & &= s . with new foam extinguishers. ' . : o . Right, apprentice seamen are i & ' shown the use of the breeches buoy, - L i ‘ : which has saved many sailors from : i : - drowning on sifiking ships. All other ; methods of life-saving are also : 3 : 3 @ & taught. Lo : : i
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Washington civilian. This is true of laundry service, clothes dryers, washing machines, valet shops, barber shops and the impressive cafeterias. The cafeterias are ‘tremendous projects in themselves. There are two—one each for officers and enlisted men. Miss Rochelle Z. Kendall of Dallas, Texas, is the Canteen’s food expert and nutritionist. Pointing out that the most modern and sanitary methods of food catering had been employed there, she said: ‘‘Every governmental stress on basic, nutritious foods has been observed by’ us, as has the general governmental theme of utmost sanitation during this wartime crisis. We have, for example, employed singleservice paper eating and drinking utensils almost exclusively, in place of obsolete and sanitarily inadequate dishwashing equipment, thus avoiding the possible danger of transmission of disease from moluth-to-mouth via poorly washed common eating and drinking utensils. More than 50,000 paper cups weekly are used.”’ Nursery Is ‘God-Send to Mothers.’ The free nursery at the Canteen, acdcording to Mrs. Luther Gulick, the
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Outdoor steering trainers are used to teach apprentice seamen the proper. method of standing a wheel watch, relieving the helmsman, and following a course. The trainers are circular metal platforms floating in concrete basins. They are equipped with a ship’s wheel, binnacle, and compass. As the trainee turns the wheel in accordance with directions of the instructor, the platform rotates. pati
topics are Kkept in view on classroom ‘bulkheads.”
- Completing four weeks of boot ; training, the new recruits move into /work week. A variety of duty in- - cluding ‘kp’’ is assigned each individual to teach discipline and to attend to necessary station fasks. *Next*the apprentice is ready to move into the course of advanced instruction for which his preference and tested capabilities qualify him. ¢ Deck trainees, at the end of their training, receive three final weeks of practical duty aboard one of the U. S.. Maritime Service training ships which operate on Long Island sound and Chesapeake bay. Ashore they use ingenious equipment to learn. In one of the large indoor buildings a mockup of a ctomplete ship’s bridge is constructed so that men may see the equipment and understand the inter-relation. #
Engipe trainees receive instruction in'a wide variety of technical subjects in ‘addition to continuing courses in boats, gunnery, physical training and swimming. In the station powerhouse which provides steam, for cooking and heating, a Liberty ship engine is installed. Men for the cooks and bakers
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, IND.
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nursery chairman, is a ‘“God-send to mothers and children traveling through Washington.”” - Employing 'two registered nurses on an eight-hour shift each, and one child educator or psychologist, the nursery operates 24 hours a day. There are 60 volunteers in this department alone, all having passed an intensive course in child care before acceptance. Since its opening, 2,568 children have been cared for, with the average between 9 and 12 months of age. The youngest guest of the nursery was a 16-day-old infant! But most unusual is the nursery’s “Baby Ferry Command.” This is a group of uniformed AWVS women who roam the city’s Union station a block away, and route weary mothers ‘and children to the Canteen. Should a child or mother be ill, both army and navy dispensaries in the city are on call for emergencies. Apparently nothing has been left to “chance in this -greatest of all Canteens. It is a mighty institution that has grown out of this war, and. is a living testimonial of the home front’s contribution to the war effort in general, and to the serviceman and his family in particular. -
} schools are selected after a series of i special examinations, In addition to standard seamanship courses these Lmen:’lzia;h Jbutchering, cooking and | baking. They are provided with two ! Liberty ship galleys and two Victory i ship galleys exact to the final pot t,,and a 0 :
- Fifty men are admitted to the Maritime Service hospital corps school each week, selected by competitive examination. Trained to. double as pursers and hospital corpsmen aboard merchant vessels, this is one of the hardest courses of instruction. The men are not doctors but skilled and competent medical men able to treat ordinary ailments of seamen and, most important, how to utilize most modern medical methods and drugs to keep alive and comfortable a dangerously ill man until the services of a medical officer become available. Founded by a provision of the Merchant Marine Act of 1936, the U. 8. Maritime Service came into being as the training organization for men to man America’s merchant ‘marine. In addition to the Maritime Service which trains both apprentice seamen and men for officers who have had 14 months sea time, the Merchant Marine Cadet Corps trains young cadet-midshipmen for duty in the: merchant marine. The parent organization, the War Shipping administration, comes under the jurisdiction of the U. S. Maritime Commission. - e it o =Under recent age limit changes youths 16 to 17% can enroll for merchant seaman training by the U. S. Maritime Service provided . they have their parents’ consent. Men between 26 to 35% can still volunteer for all branches of Maritime Service training, provided they secure a referral card from the U. S. Employment Service. Men up to 50 years of age can yvolunteer for cooks and bakers training only. . Expenses of recruits are paid to one of the four major training stations of the Maritime Service. In addition to a 10,000-man station at ‘Sheepshead Bay are schools at Hoffman Island, N. Y., St. Petersburg, Fla., and Avalon, Calif. = . Pay during training is $5O per month r increases for the more advanced gchools. Uniforms and ‘quarters are furnished trainees. Upon - completing training, the men ~are assigned aboard a merchant vessel to begin “Delivering the Goods” all over the world. ¢
Washington Digest
APérsonal Contact Brings Parties Cloéer WN .~ Together, Churchill Says; UNRRA Good o -~ Example of Friendly Cooperation. ~ ~ §& 57 bt N BAUKHAGE . . : News Analyst and Commentator,
WNU Service, Union Trust Building, < Washington, D. C.
The world has entered a period of international gatherings, the number and scope of which have never even been approached before in history. On their success or failure depends the winning or the losing of the peace. {0 In the fields and the factories of the United States were produced the materials whose weight in the balance sealed the victory for the AlHes. . Now, will America be willing to contribute to the conferences which are struggling -to deal ‘with postwar problems that ‘“‘town-meet-ing’’ spirit which has made our own “league’ of states a success? With--out this help no trail to peace can be blazed. There was a moment in Quebec, last month, at the one gathering when press and radio stood face to face with Roosevelt and Churchill, when a human note entered the atmosphere that struck me forcefully. The prime minister was speaking about the speculation over the various persons who had been called into the Quebec conference and concerning whom there had been much speculation, not only Foreign Minister Eden, but also Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau. : The prime minister developed a theme which the President has often used and which in both cases, I believe, -represented the considered opinion of men who had learned by experience. And that theme is that many difficult problems become sim- - plified when they are discussed face to face. Mr. Churchill remarked it was hard to underestimate the inefficacy of the printed word (as compared to personal contact) and he also said that already a number of friendships had developed from An-glo-American meetings -which were a decided asset to both nations from ‘the diplomatic standpoint. i ‘lndividuals can learn to get on together especially when the goal ahead of them is something above and beyond their own personal desires. | g ; UNRRA'’s Staff Pledged to Fairness I was discussing this very point recently with a-member of the United Nations Rehabilitation. and Relief ‘administration. He believes firmly that the conferences of an international nature .already. called, have for the most part shown a great enough degree of success to justify the hope for considerable progress toward world understanding. Some of the facts concerning UNRRA itself, not generally realized, are warth presenting here because they seem to support this optimism. . UNRRA has just completed its second session in Montreal and I must say there was an air about ‘that meeting which gave one a feeling of the stability of the organization. In the first place its director general, former Governor Lehman of New york, is so thoroughly ab-. sorbed by his job and imbued with enthusiasm for it that his influence energizes the whole staff. This is one of the intangible things about this international body which makes one have some faith in the ability of the peoples of different nationalities to get together to do things. Another thing, also more or less intangible but recognizeable as a force for unity, is the spirit of the 'UNRRA" employees’ which ‘is symbolized by the oath they all have to take. At this point let me point out that the employees of the organi- ‘ zation must not' be confused with the 44 members of the council, UNRRA’s policy making bog The ~council members are all plenipotentiaries representing their respective countries, just as members of congress represent different districts. ~ But the employees, from the di‘rector general down, who are the employees of the 44 nations, take an international oath in which they swear they will 'serve all countries equally and will not allow national Préfli:ldiceofany kind to enter into their decisions or their conduct. The ‘result is an objective attitude whichit is hard for a person making no. such conscious: effort to attain, evento comprehend. I recall something similar on the part of members of
BRIEES. .6y Dabkige =
' A Tokyo radio program announced recently that ‘“‘America is getting short of pilots” becduse ‘‘Ameri- | cans are using many women pilots | in the Pacific battles.”” ~ _ N oA . The census bureau pictures :the | average American father in the | w«{mesfg We o mar .ried, living with his wife and wit one or two children. , . | 4”\ ,‘ igos :_ e S .‘
the Belgian relief commission in the last war. Their ability to remain in occupied Belgian territory depended on demonstrating to the complete satisfaction of the German military commanders that they were neutral and their conscious effort to act utterly disinterested brought about a really neutral wviewpoint. ‘Of course, this strictly non-parti-san attitude is not, nor is it expected to be, adopted by the representatives of the member nations, and the controversy which arose at the recent session' concerning UNRRA'’s getivity in former enemy territory was due to the play of emotions which takes place when hate has been nurtured for a long time, as the Axis nurtured it. According to the UNRRA rules, no relief can be administered' in former enemy country unless a majority of the council so votes and if the enemy country pays for such services and supplies as it receives. It was natural that some of the nations which suffered as ‘they did under the Nazi or Fascist heel, would be prejudiced. . UNRRA Ready to
Move Into Balkans So much for' the solidity of UNRRA. It has only begun to function, of course, and its latest meeting was the first when attention could be given to matters other than fundamental policies. It is now in operation and the number of technicians attending was greatly increased.
Meanwhile, however, UNRRA imen are ready in Cairo, the moment the military is able to give the word, to move into Greece and Yugoslavia and first, assist the army relief work and then, when the army is ready to turn these functions over, take charge.
Repatriation is a very important part of any European relief since millions of people have been evacuated or driven or have fled from ‘their own homeland and are scat“tered about the world. UNRRA has taken over the work of the Middle East Refugee relief and has charge of the placement and maintenance of 50,000 Greeks and Yugoslavs in Palestine and Egypt.. It has a new camp located in Algeria where the climate represents less of a change than the desert from the homeland“of the refugees. Theé poor:-people-suffer enough in morale, they are either women, children or disabled men, not°the ideal grouping for :a cheerful society and life on a desert is not popular with many people even when they have congenial company. ' . UNRRA’s accomplishments so far, the excellent press it has had and the enthusiasm with which it has \ been received—even the few unpleas< ant stories circulated about it—all indicate that it is a going concern even though it is only intended to ‘be a temporary one. i We might go down the list of other conferences, past or pending, and report a good deal of progress on most of them: the Bretton Woods Monetary conference, the one on food and agriculture, both resulted in the ¢reation of permanent organizations. A meeting of the ministers of education of the United Nations held last April -in London, I, am told, will undoubtedly contribute to the pro.motion of wider educational opportunities of education. /
A general economic conference, recently called by Secretary Hull, and one on aviation are yet to be proved. : It is only when you get into realm of the military or the political that you begin to run into snags. It might be argued that the reason for this is that military and political goals are purely selfish. 2& @ + Petroleum may be in continuous process of formation in the beds of gulfs and oceans, according to Professor Denis L. Fox of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. He recently analyzed many samples of mud, some with an estimated age of 6,000 .years, and found them well supplied with well-preserved pigmented organic materials. He also found some of the muds inhabited by bacteria which are able to directly synthesize petroleum. =~
The Berlin radio has announced that the government will provide _‘generous” indemnification for all . da'ma'ge?causedxby enemy action and ‘that “‘those who buy new furniture and household equipment will get paid immediately for whatever they ‘cost."’ Previous German broadcasts have indicated that there is virtu. ally no new furniture and household-
rgw«»&»,pmmw@mbhwhfiwbe’ IASK ME ? ? 5 ANOTHER ’ : ? A General Quiz 5 The Questions - 1. What is the average temperature of the sea? ~ 2. Who was the first woman governor of a state in the United Sunieße s -‘ - 3. What is the highest mountain in the British Isles? | 4. Which was the largest American city when the constitution was adopted? ; : 5. What was the first article to be rationed after Pearl Harbor? 6. Off what cape is the phantom ship the Flying Dutchman said to be seen in stormy weather? 7. How many of the Great Lakes bound the state of Michigan? 8. In what country can you Jjudge a woman’s wealth by the number of her petticoats? 9. What is the usual origin of lakes in high latitudes? 10. Could a state establish a state religion without violating the U. S. Constitution? - The Answers 1. Below 39 degrees fahrenheit. 2. Mrs. Miriam A. Ferguson (Texas, 1925). 3. Ben Nevis (4,406 feet). 4. New York (population in 1790, 49,401; then Philadelphia, 28,522). 5. Tires. 6. The Cape of Good Hope. 7. Four. 8. Holland. . 9. Glaciers. 10. Yes. The first amendment to the constitution, and the next nine, all of which constitute the Bill of Rights, are binding upon the federal government, but not upon the states. However, all states now have clauses providing for religious freedom.
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