The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 December 1941 — Page 4

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THE DAILY BANNER, OREENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY. DEfE'WRET? in, 1941. •

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IIKill SCIIOOI. ( ()N\ OCATION William "Pat" Buckner appeare'l before the Greemastle hi«!i school student body at its weekly convocation program Tuesday. Asnste I hv Misses Mary Pierce and Mary Pittman, Mr. Buckner presented a program of poetry and song. Miss Pierce opened the program with a solo “Summertime" followed by "Still As The Night" by Miss Pittman. Mr. Buckner then read some poetry selections of his own composition including “Love,’’ “My Sons, My Sons,” "I Have Lived," and two safety poems, “Mr." Cross" and "Jane Draper." The highlight of the program was a song written by Mr. Buckner, "If Summer Comes Again" which he sang for the group. The program closed with a poem “1 Have America." Mr. Buckner has appeared before the student body for the past sev-

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eral years and is known in the community for his poetry and song.

PRESIDENT SPEAKS <(.'oiitiiiiioil from l*nj;e Ou<‘> Russia. And Germany puts all the other republics o( America into the same category of enemies. "Powerful and i esourceful gangsters have banded together to make war upon the whole human race. Their challenge has now been flung at the United States. “We must be set to face a long war. The attack on Pearl Harbor can be repeated at any one of many points in both oceans and along both our coast lines against all the rest of the hemisphere. “Our ocean-girt hemisphere is not immune from attack. “Your government knows that for weeks Germany has been telling Japan that if Japan did not attack the United States. Japan would not

shaie in dividing the spoils with Germany when the peace came. She was promised by Germany that if she came in she would receive the complete and perpetual control of the whole Pacific area- and that means not only the Far East, not-only the islands in the Pacific, but also a stranglehold on the west coast of North, Central and South America. "We also know that Germany and Japan art conducting their military and naval operations in accordance with a joint plan. That plan considers all peoples and nations which are not helping the axis powers as common enemies to each and every one of the axis powers. “That is their simple and obvious grand strategy." So Mr. Roosevelt said he had accepted the challenge and that we would accept no result except victoty, final and complete. We are in the war. he explained, not for con-

quest or for vengeneance, but for a world in which our children will be safe. He saiil we expected to eliminate the danger from Japan but that Hitler and Mussolini must go, too. He compared the actions of Japan in Asia and of Hitler and Mussolini in Europe anil Africa for 10 years

past and said:

"It is all of one pattern. "Without warning—without warning without warning." “We may acknowledge tiiat our enemies have performed a brilliant feat of deception, perfectly timed and executed with great skill,” Mr. Roosevelt said of the Japanese attack in the Pacific. "It was a thoroughly dishonorable deed, but we must face the fact that modern warfare as conducted in the Nazi manner is a dirty business. We don’t like it—we didn't want to get into it—but we are in it and we’re going to fight it with everything we've got."

FORMER AMBASSADOR SPEAKS "I feel tempted to discount the j German influence on Japan," said j Hugh Wilson, America’s last ambas-1 sailor to Germany this afternoon in a lecture before the students and j faculty of DePauw University. "I j ■ don’t see what Hitler had to promise | I or why the Japanese would believe

j Hitler’s promises.”

Mr. Wilson, recently retired from the diplomatic service after thirty years as a career diplomat, spoke twice at DePauw, once at a lengthened chapel on his German experiences and again on “America’s Place in the Present International Situation," Because of the suddeness of recent developments. Mr. Wilson was forced to reframe completely his outline to

fit the situation.

No doubt. Mr. Wilson continued, Hitler was delighted with the events in the Pacific. As to why the Japanese entered upon this “insentiate" war, Mr. Wilson believed it was because the Japanese war party was losing face with its own people and preferred to go down fighting rather

course, have their dangers. The first and most obvious- is to begin total war on Japan and thereby risk the destruction of the entire fleet. If the strategy would win, no objection could be found. However, any fleet oven though unused is a potential strength. So. the United States may

follow the second long range war. Tin. try the patience cans, but it has nn The Japanese, Mr out. do not hav > hard and continuother hand the r fight with mannnot hind her In any ,

may face a long ; patience is tested."

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